Why I love the MMWR

Always the pesky potatoes.

I guess if you could distill it into vodka you could leave the botox behind.
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
That seems a lot to ask of a toilet.
Yes.

Though I'm pretty sure they ferment in baggies or some such. The open-top fermenters lead to too much, er, volatility, I think.
 
"Dinner opened in 2011, the restaurant specialises in historical English food . . ."

Well there's the problem, he's using recipes that predate man's understanding of bacteria. Or maybe he feels the experience is more authentic if diners walk out suffering from the plague.
 
I have some memory of having seen a recipe that I thought was his that involved holding a steak sous-vide at 120* for 24 hours or some such.

It probably doesn't make that much difference to norovirus, but it seems like a great way to give your guests a staph or salmonella infection.
 
originally posted by Dan McQ:
Not the MMWR, but a great game plan of what needs to be done to address the pesky buggars that keep appearing in its pages.

I may take a dark view, but my notion of this world is pretty pessimistic. The intergovernmental panel is likely to solve the problem sometime after we've all festered into gooey puddles. Narrow-spectrum targeted drugs given in combination are a biologically fabulous idea that unfortunately have in most cases no plausible path to development, clinical testing, or approval, even in important infections.

Sure would be nice if we stopped wasting our current drugs on the livestock, though.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
I may take a dark view, but my notion of this world is pretty pessimistic. The intergovernmental panel is likely to solve the problem sometime after we've all festered into gooey puddles. Narrow-spectrum targeted drugs given in combination are a biologically fabulous idea that unfortunately have in most cases no plausible path to development, clinical testing, or approval, even in important infections.

No real argument with that. It was published in Nature, after all. The problem is we can't even get the fools on the Hill to kick start things here in the States...

STAAR Act

Sure would be nice if we stopped wasting our current drugs on the livestock, though.

Or wasting them on viral infections in all us humans.
 
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