I dont think you can inject Ozone in to someones veins.
Ozone is great for sterilizing instruments or minor wounds but not so great on skin.
The big problem is doctors and nurses not following cleanliness protocols.
Proper procedure for health professionals in a hospital when seeing patients.
1. When entering a patient room, wash hands or use hand sanitizer and don surgical gloves.
2. When exiting room remove and dispose of surgical gloves, wash hands or use hand sanitizer.
This is a rather simple procedure but when you are in six or more patient rooms an hour by the end of your work week your hands are cracked and bleeding, using the hand sanitizer becomes painful.
So the health professionals become somewhat negligent in following the protocol because pain is a great teacher. Keep washing your hands repeatedly and they become raw and painful. Lesson learned dont wash your hands so much.
So many will cut the washing in half. Only wash when entering a room. This is the part patients will notice the most. Unfortunately it is the part that is probably the least important because they have already carried the MRSA out of an infected room in to the hallway and spread it to everything they touch.
An important thing to think about is NOT having any kind of invasive procedure in a surgical suite or outpatient center. They are not help to the same sterilization standards. We get unannounced inspections several times a year in the place where I work. Outpatient surgical centers are not.
Actually you can inject it in the vein. There are a number of treatments along those lines, including where blood is taken, saturated with ozone and then replaced.
For topical purposes, ozonated olive oil can be used to treat infected wounds. It actually works amazingly well. You can buy it on Amazon. :-)
BTW...I didn’t mean to ignore the rest of your post. You make very valid points and I’m sure that’s a huge part of the problem.