If I stumbled across a well known company that suggested using antibiotics blindly, I would have nothing to do with them. Right there, zero credibility. There are some idiotic things said online by shortsighted, make a quick buck people, and part of the hobby is learning that you may well know better than the self proclaimed expert. I will always take a serious look at statements from scientists working in the field, but a loud guy with a bad haircut who tells us what to do? That kind of person probably has no more training, education or research background than I do - just a lot of confidence and a platform.
Your questions about the three drug recipe are good ones.
You can use salt, or not. It likely doesn't matter either way, and you know your water more than we do. I consider it a harsh chemical that should only be used in a well targeted manner, but I am in a minority there. Prazi will get the most common type of worms, if they are present. 'White" worms or gutworms are not always problems, even when present. The Fritz stuff works on nematodes, which are trouble. But that's a rough med on the fish. It's gold if the fish are infested, and it saves their lives, but you don't do chemo on the off chance you have cancer.
I'm not part of the anti-med wing of the hobby. We have our anti things that work, reality denying crew like any other human group. I just think that you only use our limited meds and remedies if you have cause. We've found some chemicals that kill the things that kill our fish. They may do damage to the fish and the environment in the tank. we use them if we have to, and we should use them well.
Fish have bodies as well evolved as our own. They are extremely complex creatures. We have 3 or 4 antiparasitics, some ill defined antibiotics, and a couple of fungicides. We have pictures as diagnostic tools. We have no vaccines. No idea of internal medicine. I don't know about you, but if that was the entire arsenal a human doctor had, I'd have been dead several times over. The most common fish diseases don't even have valid treatments.
We want to do right, and people cash in on our kindness. There are meds that "fix" problems with almost no ingredients. I think they're to make us feel better. I also think a lot of the advice goes that way. I feed new arrivals (I deal with fish that have travelled for days) right away, and use no meds. I have the limited options I can get (antibiotic sales are banned here if you don't have a prescription) on hand, just in case. If I see nematodes, I hit them immediately. If I don't, the treatments sit on the shelf til they expire and are replaced.
Your questions about the three drug recipe are good ones.
You can use salt, or not. It likely doesn't matter either way, and you know your water more than we do. I consider it a harsh chemical that should only be used in a well targeted manner, but I am in a minority there. Prazi will get the most common type of worms, if they are present. 'White" worms or gutworms are not always problems, even when present. The Fritz stuff works on nematodes, which are trouble. But that's a rough med on the fish. It's gold if the fish are infested, and it saves their lives, but you don't do chemo on the off chance you have cancer.
I'm not part of the anti-med wing of the hobby. We have our anti things that work, reality denying crew like any other human group. I just think that you only use our limited meds and remedies if you have cause. We've found some chemicals that kill the things that kill our fish. They may do damage to the fish and the environment in the tank. we use them if we have to, and we should use them well.
Fish have bodies as well evolved as our own. They are extremely complex creatures. We have 3 or 4 antiparasitics, some ill defined antibiotics, and a couple of fungicides. We have pictures as diagnostic tools. We have no vaccines. No idea of internal medicine. I don't know about you, but if that was the entire arsenal a human doctor had, I'd have been dead several times over. The most common fish diseases don't even have valid treatments.
We want to do right, and people cash in on our kindness. There are meds that "fix" problems with almost no ingredients. I think they're to make us feel better. I also think a lot of the advice goes that way. I feed new arrivals (I deal with fish that have travelled for days) right away, and use no meds. I have the limited options I can get (antibiotic sales are banned here if you don't have a prescription) on hand, just in case. If I see nematodes, I hit them immediately. If I don't, the treatments sit on the shelf til they expire and are replaced.