The
huge problem of antibiotic resistant germs will 'finish' modern medicine unless
confronted, the Chief Medical Officer, Dame Sally Davies, warned
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Modern
medicine is' finished' if the problem of antibiotic resistant germs is not
confronted, the Chief Medical Officer warned today.
Dame Sally
Davies said prescribing antibiotics for conditions for which they will do no
good only made the problem worse.
She has
called before for the development of new antibiotics as the current ones get
increasingly less effective.
She told
the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: 'Modern medicine as we know it - if we don't
halt this rise of resistance - will be finished.
'It's a
very powerful statement and it is true.
'Take
cancer: most modern cancer treatments result in reducing your immunity and
getting infections.
'If those
are bugs that are resistant to antibiotics then you are going to have a choice
of do I take my chance the antibiotics won't work, or do I do my bucket list?'
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Dame Sally
was reacting to the publication of new research by the Wellcome Trust which
shows that public understanding of antimicrobial resistance is still lacking.
She added:
'We have got to help GPs in every way. If they tell me by giving them a rule
that will help the discussion with patients, we can do that.
'But
actually what they need is time with patients and patients being
receptive.
'That's where this research
is helpful - how do we get our community, our public, to understand antibiotics
are most frequently not needed but when they are, treat them with respect?'
The
researchers conducted a series of interviews and focus groups in London,
Manchester
and Birmingham.
They found
that that most people, if they had heard of antibiotic resistance at all,
thought that it was their body which becomes resistant to antibiotics, rather
than the bacteria that cause drug-resistant infections.
This
misconception often makes people feel like antibiotic resistance is someone
else’s problem.
Few of
those interviewed think they overuse or misuse antibiotics so therefore they
mistakenly think resistance will not be a problem for them.
One person
interviewed during the research said: 'The more you take, the more your body
becomes resistant to it. They stop working, but I don’t take them very often.'
Mark
Henderson, of the Wellcome Trust, told the programme: 'People had heard about
(over prescription) by and large but interestingly they had picked up
antibiotics resistance was a problem which had occurred in people's bodies.
'That is
not in fact what happens. What happens is it is actually the germs, the
bacteria, that acquire the resistance through normal evolution.
'One of
the problems with antibiotic resistance is people not completing courses they
have been prescribed. If you think it is your body that is becoming intolerant,
that's a perfectly reasonable thing to do.'
The
research suggested people understand the concept more readily when doctors, the
media and other communicators talk about “drug-resistant infections” or
“antibiotic-resistant germs”, rather than “antibiotic resistance”.
This makes
it easier to understand that it is bacteria that acquire resistance, not
people’s bodies.
The
misconception could help to explain why many people who are prescribed
antibiotics fail to complete the course, believing that this will prevent their
bodies from becoming resistant.
In fact,
failure to complete a course of antibiotics can be a major factor in the
development of drug-resistant infections.
This is
because it exposes germs to enough of the drug to promote resistance, but not
enough to kill them.
And people
were much more receptive when they were presented with real examples of how
antibiotic resistance could affect them or their families, or with reference to
specific bacterial infections that they might have had.
The scale
of the problem was best explained when researchers showed people pictures of
six common resistant bacteria which are becoming harder to treat.
Understanding
that the issue was about infections like strep throat, urinary tract infections
(UTIs) or E-coli made the problem seem common, as most interviewees had had at
least one of these illnesses and been treated with antibiotics.
Explaining
that antibiotic resistance could make routine operations like hip replacements
or caesareans deadly was also effective.
Another
consistent finding was that people have a positive relationship with
antibiotics.
Interviewees
felt that getting them was validation that they were ill, both for themselves
and others, and that they hadn’t “wasted the doctor’s time or my own”.
This means
that in many cases people want to be prescribed antibiotics, whatever the
nature of the illness they have, and will deploy a series of tactics to ensure
they do, which may contribute to antibiotic
overuse.
The study
comes after research published in April predicted that a new generation of
superbugs resistant to antibiotics could kill up to 80,000 Britons in a single
outbreak.
It warned
that in the next 20 years, surgery could become too risky because of an
increased risk of infection, while catching flu could have a ‘serious’ impact
on individuals.
The
figures, issued by the Cabinet Office, showed that previously effective drugs
will become useless in the face of resistant bugs, causing a surge in the
number of sufferers of illnesses such as tuberculosis and pneumonia.
And for
the first time the annual National Risk Register of Civil Emergencies, which
assesses the challenges posed by terrorism, natural disasters, disease and
industrial strife, has included the dangers of antimicrobial resistance
(AMR).
The report
says: ‘Without effective antibiotics, even minor surgery and routine operations
could become high-risk procedures, leading to increased duration of illness and
ultimately premature mortality.
‘Much of
modern medicine, for example organ transplantation, bowel surgery and some
cancer treatments, may become unsafe due to the risk of infection.
‘In
addition, influenza pandemics would become more serious without effective
treatments.
‘The
number of infections complicated by AMR are expected to increase markedly over
the next 20 years. If a widespread outbreak were to occur, we could expect
around 200,000 people to be affected by a bacterial blood infection that could
not be treated effectively with existing drugs, and around 80,000 of these
might die.
‘High
numbers of deaths could also be expected from other forms of antimicrobial
resistant infection.’
Around 25,000 people die
annually across Europe because of infections that are resistant to antibiotic
drugs. Scientists have forecast the potential fatalities from an increasing
resistance to drugs in HIV, tuberculosis, malaria.
Culled from Dail Mail UK |
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