Doling
out too many antibiotics 'will make even scratches deadly': WHO warns
that crisis could be worse than Aids
- Spread of deadly superbugs that evade antibiotics is happening globally
- It's now a major threat to public health, the World Health Organisation says
- It could mean minor injuries and common infections become fatal
30
April, 2014
Deaths
from cuts and grazes, diarrhoea and flu will soon be common as
antibiotics lose their power to fight minor infections, experts have
warned.
The
World Health Organisation says the problem has been caused by
antibiotics being so widely prescribed that bacteria have begun to
evolve and develop resistance.
It
claims the crisis is worse than the Aids epidemic – which has
caused 25million deaths worldwide – and threatens to turn the clock
back on modern medicine.
Antibiotic
resistance needs to be taken as seriously as AIDS was in the 1980s,
experts say
Antibiotic
resistance needs to be taken as seriously as AIDS was in the 1980s,
experts say
The
WHO warns that the public should ‘anticipate many more deaths’ as
it may become routine for children to develop lethal infections from
minor grazes, while hospital operations become deadly as patients are
at risk of developing infections that were previously treatable.
Doctors
are increasingly finding that antibiotics no longer work against
urinary and skin infections, tuberculosis and gonorrhoea.
The
WHO is urging the public to take simple precautions, such as washing
hands to prevent bacteria from spreading in the first place.
Stem
cell jab is 'five times better than drugs' for treating people with
life-threatening heart conditions
Doctors
are also being told to prescribe antibiotics sparingly and ensure
patients finish the full course, as if they stop mid-way the bacteria
may become resistant. In England last year some 41.7million
prescriptions were written out, up from 37.2million in 2006.
SUPERBUGS:
THE GUIDE TO BUGS RENDERING ANTIBIOTICS OBSOLETE
MRSA
- Patients infected with MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus) are 64 per cent more likely to die than those with a
non-resistant form of S. aureus.
People
infected by resistant superbugs are also likely to stay longer in
hospital and may need intensive care, pushing up costs.
C.
difficile - This bacteria produces spores that are resistant to high
temperatures and are very difficult to eliminate. It is spread
through contaminated food and objects and can cause blood poisoning
and tears in the large intestine.
E.
coli - this now accounts for one in three cases of bacterial
infections in the blood in the UK and a new strain is resistant to
most antibiotics. It is highly contagious and could cause more than
3,000 deaths a year.
Acinetobacter
Baumannii - a common bacteria which is resistant to most antibiotics
and which can easily infect patients in a hospital. It can cause
meningitis and is fatal in about 80 per cent of patients.
CRKP
- this is a bacterium that is associated with extremely difficult to
treat blood infections and meningitis. It is resistant to nearly all
antibiotics and is fatal in 50 per cent of cases.
....
Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis is estimated to kill 150,000 people globally each year.
Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis is estimated to kill 150,000 people globally each year.
NDM-1
- a bacteria detected in India of which some strains are resistant to
all antibiotics.
Dr
Keiji Fukuda, the WHO’s assistant director for health security,
said: ‘Without urgent, co-ordinated action, the world is headed for
a post-antibiotic era, in which common infections and minor injuries
which have been treatable for decades can once again kill.
‘Effective
antibiotics have been one of the pillars allowing us to live longer,
live healthier, and benefit from modern medicine.
‘Unless
we take significant actions to improve efforts to prevent infections,
and also change how we produce, prescribe and use antibiotics, the
world will lose more and more of these global public health goods and
the implications will be devastating.
‘We
should anticipate to see many more deaths.
‘We
are going to see people who have untreatable infections.’
Only
last month, Britain’s chief medical officer Dame Sally Davies
criticised GPs for needlessly ‘dishing out’ antibiotics to
patients.
In
the largest study of its kind, the WHO looked at data from 114
countries on seven major types of bacteria. Experts are particularly
concerned about bacteria responsible for pneumonia, urinary tract
infections, skin infections, diarrhoea and gonorrhoea.
They
are also worried that antiviral medicines are becoming increasingly
less effective against flu.
Dr
Danilo Lo Fo Wong, a senior adviser at the WHO, said: ‘A child
falling off their bike and developing a fatal infection would be a
freak occurrence in the UK, but that is where we are heading.’
British
experts likened the problem to the Aids epidemic of the 1980s.
Professor Laura Piddock, who specialises in microbiology at the
University of Birmingham, said: ‘The world needs to respond as it
did to the Aids crisis.
‘We
still need a better understanding of all aspects of resistance as
well as new discovery, research and development of new antibiotics.’
The
first antibiotic, penicillin, was developed by Sir Alexander Fleming
in 1929. But their use has soared since the 1960s, and in 1998 the
Government issued guidelines to doctors urging them to curb
prescriptions. Nonetheless, surveys suggest they are still prescribed
for 80 per cent of coughs, colds and sore throats
Anazing blog providing a lot of information about antibiotics..
ReplyDeletebut I have a question , are Generic Amoxil and
Ciprofloxacin 250mg
are safe to use or not??