As many physicians have noticed over the past decades, the increased usage of antibiotics has expended a scrupulous pressure on various types of "susceptible bacteria" (Bell et al 30). Due to this pressure, many bacterium have begun to evolve into highly resistant strains. The article by Brian Bell and his esteemed colleagues analyzes the relationships between both community-based patients and hospitalized patients based on the ideology that certain anabolic patterns are arising from a large variety of pathogens circulating in the two groups. .
Many microbiologists have discovered that bacteria overwhelm the human race one billion to one. Everything from the deepest floors of the ocean to the polar icecaps are inhabited by varying species of bacterium. Many people are unaware of the sustainable nature of bacterial microorganisms. A multitude of species can survive in scalding hot springs, places with little to no sunlight or oxygen, and even within radioactive chemicals. Upon the discovery of a sufficient living environment, bacteria will multiply to exponentially high numbers. Unfortunately, the most common habitat for bacteria is the human body. Microbiologists in recent studies have discovered that over ten thousand varied species of microbes dwell within the body as well as on its surface. According to Dr. Karl Klose, "there are more bacterial cells within the body than there are human cells as well as bacterial genes to human genes." If more people were aware of these factors, perhaps hand sanitizer corporations across the globe would engineer a beverage. Based on an article produced by the American Academy of Microbiology, bacterial microorganisms such as "Clostridium Difficile," which is known to cause fatal diarrhea, are able to share genes with other species such as "Salmonella Typhi" (26). This particular strain of Salmonella found by microbiologists, spread rapidly across the state of California not too long ago causing unfortunate outbreaks throughout the population (Weise).