Dear Carol Ann,
Good observation; however, I suggest that if only ONE is protected, it's a
simple precaution; and really, who knows who might have become unknowingly
infected? Since this practice is simple, effective and inexpensive, I'm for
it.
Sincerely,
_______________________________________
Richard Harris, 58 Year FL Pharmacist
448 West Juniata Street
Clermont, FL 34711
http://www.rharrisinc.com
http://www.seasilver.com/reh
http://healthandhealing.blogspot.com


  -----Original Message-----
  From: Carol Ann [mailto:[email protected]]
  Sent: Monday, May 15, 2006 2:28 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: CS>Silver & Hepatitis C


  Mike, what I find objectionable is that they have taken the practice of
putting an antibiotic into newborns eyes as a matter of standard procedure.
There are not that many women today who have  syphilis and/or gonorrhea
which is not discovered through prenatal care, blood tests, etc, available
to women of all walks of life, regardless of economic means.  The practice
may have once been applicable when women were more inclined to have home
births, midwives, or lived in rural areas with no medical services.  I see
it as a rather archaic, hold over practice in today's society.

  "M. G. Devour" <[email protected]> wrote:
    Debbie writes:
    > Mike what about the cs they use in newborns eyes as soon as they are
    > born, and the use in the burn unit's today too or is that something
    > different?

    They used to use silver nitrate in the eyes of newborns. It stung and
    sometimes caused temporary staining, if I remember right, but did
    protect against blindness caused by syphilis and gonorrhea. Nowadays
    most places are using antibiotic ointments or drops.






  Regards,

  Carol Ann

   _______________________________
  God is what you can find in anything you look at if you look long enough.


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