runsforcelery wrote:mustangman wrote:I agree, much of medicine improvement is going to have to wait for electricity and the discovery of radiation. I was thinking along the lines of germ theory, antibiotics. and other drugs such as anesthetics etc. I do think that with the microscopes as has been said germ theory at least is inevitable, as well as the understanding of how the other "curses" of Pasquale are caused. such as scurvy and osteonecrosis of the jaw.
Guys, they already have pretty decent anesthetics, and Fleming moss and a few other native plants provide a relatively effective base of antibiotics. They've also been able to see germs for a long time, and, thanks to the
Writ, they know exactly what they are: demons loosed upon fallen humanity as a consequence of Shan-wei's Rebellion and the War Against the Fallen. They also know how to defend against them by using the dispensations granted by the Archangel Pasquale.
Where's the problem?
The history of antibiotics to date has not shown any serious longevity for effectiveness. Many antibiotics have had an effective life of only a decade or two. Mutations occur rapidly in bacteria, and they develop enzymes that destroy the antibiotics, or change the molecular structure of the pathogen to be resistant to the effects of the antibiotic. Even Vancomycin, which for many years was the emergency cure-all, is generating resistant strains. In it's case, that required 9 separate mutations. Without all of them, it was still effective.
My issue is that to date, there is no antibiotic that is resistant to pathogen mutation over the long haul. I suppose I should put my Science Fiction hat on and assume that a general antibiotic that pathogens could not evade or avoid would be developed, but I know a little too much to be comfortable with that. Who knows, maybe Fleming moss actually produces nanos - in which case, a mutation could turn the healing moss lethal in no time at all. I further suppose it is possible that there is a temple-based AI system by Pasquale that produces new antibiotics what the old ones stop working.
I guess I'm just uncomfortable with providing Fleming Moss and there, all fixed...
(My father was a pathologist, so I picked up a lot of this from him. Did you know that during WW II they recycled penicillin from the urine of treated patients?)
Sorry
-- Bob G
P.S. You can read about the history of antibiotics, antivirals, and chemotherapy in
Life Saving Drugs, The Elusive Magic Bullet from the Royal Society of Chemistry.
SF & Fantasy: The only things better than Chocolate.