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In an age of constant public sharing of information and opinions on social media, one of the few absolutely confidential conversations we can have, apart from with a priest, is with a doctor. Secrets are told in the consulting room, tears are shed, news is given, both bad and good. The object of both the patient and the doctor鈥檚 attention is the complex, wondrous, often miraculous ways in which our minds and bodies work. And the grief we feel when they don鈥檛. This confidential conversation came under fresh scrutiny yesterday as NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence') published new guidelines for doctors, encouraging them to cut down on the prescription of antibiotics. Professor Mark Baker鈥檚 language was strong: 鈥渢he whole basis of modern medicine relies on the assumption that infection can be treated successfully鈥. He explained that the over-prescription of antibiotics has global consequences. Fighting infections such as Multi drug Resistant TB becomes impossible and if the surgeon鈥檚 ability to control infection goes, life saving operations, such as organ transplants, will become a thing of the past. The antibiotic apocalypse. Our 10 minute conversation with the GP is not only private but short. And it is this that perhaps provides some of the context for the problem. Patients will often say I haven鈥檛 got time to be ill. When people on a zero hours contract, or self employed, lose pay if they don鈥檛 work, or the demands of children require parents to be up and running however rough they feel, the temptation to ask for a drug that will get us better faster is clear. We have lost patience with our own body鈥檚 capacity to heal itself; because time is of the essence and we have to keep going. For the doctor too, aware of the pressure on the NHS as a whole, the temptation to avoid conflict and give the patient what they want, mindful of the packed waiting room outside must cause stress too. Taking a longer view together, connects our immediate need for relief with the consequences for future generations. We would connect too our private consultation and the global crisis in infection control. And importantly, we could be reminded that in a lot more cases than we think, our created selves can heal ourselves. Our bodies can fight minor infections on their own, given time and rest; two elements of life often in too short supply. The principle of creation repairing and renewing itself is at the heart of the Jewish and Christian traditions and one of Jesus鈥檚 frequently asked questions of his contemporaries was 鈥渄o you want to be well鈥? To want humanity to be well in the greatest sense might mean sometimes letting ourselves be sick in the meantime.
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