Modeller: "just because we are able to detect and treat a diseases doesn't mean we have evolved."
No, and I didn't mean to imply that would be evolution. My point was that if a genetic disadvantage were countered by medicine - taking on board Jake's entirely correct point about it being only the lucky few who have access to such medicines - it wouldn't matter if that were passed on.
"I used the term ; may go backwards, and according to the Lancet we are losing much of our natural resistance to certain diseases. Now this may be because of the over use of antibiotics but the net result we have gone backwards."
What tends to happen is the diseases evolve resistance to a particular antibiotic; it's them that evolve, not us. We're effectively staying the same.
"Whatever the reasons if our bodies are no longer able to cope with our environment , I would say that is an indication of going backwards."
Well, this may just be semantics but (assuming the claims are correct) to me that suggests we're no longer adapted to our environment. That's not going backwards, that's just not going 'forwards' quickly enough in responses to changes in the environment. That doesn't mean it's not potentially problematic or that we don't need to address these issues, of course.
The fact of the matter is that from the moment we first fashioned a tool from a stick or a rock, our ancesters began using technology to outstrip natural evolution.