I think you are. It is a complex issue, which is born from a very young age, because all physicians were children at one point. All of us have a love affair with antibiotics. We love antibiotics. We're told as children that if we don't finish them, we're going to get sick and that no matter how bad they taste, we better take them. You get this emotional attachment and we're all in love with antibiotics. Everything all of us have been talking about goes against our emotional instincts around antibiotics. Then when you try to pair that with the education that most of us had earlier on in our training, which thankfully is starting to change, but it's only just starting to change, it makes it very difficult.
The problem with AMR is that as time has gone on, this problem has grown dramatically. As I said, when I trained, you only needed to know one kind of drug-resistant problem. Now there are a whole bunch of them. They're complicated. They don't really make sense. They have acronyms that aren't relevant to the prescriber. It's very difficult to communicate, and there are no reliable guidelines or centralized information that's easy to digest.