'Superbugs could erase a century of medical advances,' experts warn

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Life > Health & Families > Health News

'Superbugs could erase a century of medical advances,' experts warn
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Drug-resistant "superbugs" represent one of the gravest threats in the history of medicine, leading experts have warned.

Routine operations could become deadly "in the very near future" as bacteria evolve to resist the drugs we use to combat them. This process could erase a century of medical advances, say government doctors in a special editorial in The Lancet health journal.

Although the looming threat of antibiotic, or anti-microbial, resistance has been known about for years, the new warning reflects growing concern that the NHS and other national health systems, already under pressure from ageing populations, will struggle to cope with the rising cost of caring for people in the "post-antibiotic era".
In a stark reflection of the seriousness of the threat, England's deputy chief medical officer, Professor John Watson, said: "I am concerned that in 20 years, if I go into hospital for a hip replacement, I could get an infection leading to major complications and possible death, simply because antibiotics no longer work as they do now."

About 35 million antibiotics are prescribed by GPs in England every year. The more the drugs circulate, the more bacteria are able to evolve to resist them. In the past, drug development kept pace with evolving microbes, with a constant production line of new classes of antibiotics. But the drugs have ceased to be profitable and a new class has not been created since 1987.

Writing in The Lancet, experts, including England's chief medical officer, Dame Sally Davies, warn that death rates from bacterial infections "might return to those of the early 20th century". They write: "Rarely has modern medicine faced such a grave threat. Without antibiotics, treatments from minor surgery to major transplants could become impossible, and health-care costs are likely to spiral as we resort to newer, more expensive antibiotics and sustain longer hospital admissions."

Strategies to combat the rise in resistance include cutting the amount of antibiotics prescribed, improving hospital hygiene and incentivising the pharmaceutical industry to work on novel antibiotics and antibiotic alternatives.

However, a leading GP told The Independent on Sunday that the time had come for the general public to take responsibility. "The change needs to come in patient expectation. We need public education: that not every ill needs a pill," said Dr Peter Swinyard, chairman of the Family Doctor Association.

"We try hard not to prescribe, but it's difficult in practice. The patient will be dissatisfied with your consultation, and is likely to vote with their feet, register somewhere else or go to the walk-in centre and get antibiotics from the nurse.

"But if we go into a post-antibiotic phase, we may find that people with pneumonia will not be treatable with an antibiotic, and will die, whereas at the moment they would live.

"People need to realise the link. If you treat little Johnny's ear infection with antibiotics, his mummy may end up dying of pneumonia. It's stark and it's, of course, not direct, but on a population-wide level, that's the kind of link we're talking about."

There are no reliable estimates of what resistance could cost health systems in the future, but the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control believes that €1.5bn (£1.2bn) a year is already being spent on health problems associated with antibiotic resistance in Europe.

Joanna Coast, professor of health economics at the University of Birmingham, said that the problem of resistance had the potential to "affect how entire health systems work".

Professor Coast added: "We don't know how big this is going to be. It's like the problems with planning for global warming. We know what the costs are now but we don't know what the costs will be into the future.

"Much of what we do in modern health system relies on us having antibiotics. We need them for prophylaxis for surgery, for people having chemotherapy for cancer. The worry is that it might make big changes to how we run our health system."

Antibiotics are also used in vast quantities in agriculture, fisheries and by vets, the resulting environmental exposure adding to bacterial resistance, with further consequences for human health.

Experts say that to meet demand without increasing resistance, drug companies will need to find new ways of financing antibiotic development that are not linked to expectations of large volume sales. Global health authorities such as the World Health Organisation have also warned that global drives to reduce antibiotic use must not harm access to life-saving drugs in poorer countries.

Writing in The Lancet, Professor Otto Cars of Uppsala University in Sweden, and one of the world's leading experts on antibiotic resistance, said: "Antibiotic resistance is a complex ecological problem which doesn't just affect people, but is also intimately connected with agriculture and the environment.

"We need to move on from 'blaming and shaming' among the many stakeholders who have all contributed to the problem, towards concrete political action and commitment to address this threat."

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...of-medical-advances-experts-warn-8944617.html

:merchant:


Keep taking antibiotics when you have a cold brehs.
 

Sensitive Blake Griffin

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the whole medical side of life scares me. so many insanely frightening illnesses and diseases out there. Let alone having to worry about ones that have yet to emerge. I wonder how evolution deniers rationalize the evolution of certain viruses and diseases in response to drugs that treat them.
 

bigDeeOT

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I'm not sure if it'd be possible to ever erradicate em. As long as we fight em, they will always find ways to evolve around it unless we wipe out the whole population "quickly" enough before they have time to evolve.
 

OneManGang

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It is entirely possible to devise new ways to combat these bugs. Think of a bacterium as a car....for the last century we have just taken off the steering wheel. Some have learned that they can still move without the steering wheel....so now we move on to destroying their engine...or even the plant that produces them. The problem is, do researchers feel the need to input the money and manpower needed to devise the best way to destroy these components and make it marketable?
 

bigDeeOT

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Yeah I mean I think if we have like all the time in the universe, we can eventually wipe em out. Maybe we will in the next centurey by some miracle. But mother nature has a very creative imagination. You take off the sterering wheel of the car, take out the engine, ok now it rearranges itself into a bicycle or something. idk, the thing with viruses is that since they're not alive, they could basically just sit around forever doing nothing, like an acorn on the ground. Then when someone pics it up to eat it, they get their life jacked. And it just goes on and on.

Viruses can make themselves look like benign obejects to the cells in our body. Or they can emulate themselves to look just like friendly parts of our own body, so in that case whatever drug you use to attack the virus is going to kill the person too.
 

OneManGang

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Yeah I mean I think if we have like all the time in the universe, we can eventually wipe em out. Maybe we will in the next centurey by some miracle. But mother nature has a very creative imagination. You take off the sterering wheel of the car, take out the engine, ok now it rearranges itself into a bicycle or something. idk, the thing with viruses is that since they're not alive, they could basically just sit around forever doing nothing, like an acorn on the ground. Then when someone pics it up to eat it, they get their life jacked. And it just goes on and on.

Viruses can make themselves look like benign obejects to the cells in our body. Or they can emulate themselves to look just like friendly parts of our own body, so in that case whatever drug you use to attack the virus is going to kill the person too.
:laff: my analogy wasnt the best but it kind of makes sense. I think with any new innovations, education and prescription protocol need to be reworked as well. Some doctors are lazy and will prescribe antibiotics to anyone at the first sign of discomfort. Also people need to finish their treatments. Just because symptoms are gone doesnt mean you are cured. The most hardened bacteria will eventually succumb to most antibiotics...but if you give them time to recuperate, that particular strain now propagates and spreads its hardiness to new generations of bacteria.

Bacteria are a walk in the park compared to viruses man. Thats a whole nother thread :wow:.
 

OneManGang

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@bigDeeOT I just thought of a better addition to my car analogy. It's not that the car rearranges itself to a bike, but for example the deconstruction process we use on other cars doesn't work on some because somewhere in their manufacturing process, for some reason an extra screw was used...or they forgot to add a piece which had the unintended result of making the steering wheel harder to remove.
 

ryshy

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this is y i dont use drugs (legal drugs)

if everyone was like me, we wouldnt have this problem, we'd just be in excruciating pain and high
 

ryshy

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Do any of y'all watch Monsters Inside Me on Animal Planet? :merchant: That show be having me scared to go outside.

If you swim in freshwater. :ufdup:
hahaha tv got me careful as fukk i feel u on fresh water. u dont see nikkas gettin parasites only white ppl climbin trees in the jungle an eating at shytty food stands in other countries an rock climbin

srsly white people have the worst survival instincts
 

ryshy

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Yeah I mean I think if we have like all the time in the universe, we can eventually wipe em out. Maybe we will in the next centurey by some miracle. But mother nature has a very creative imagination. You take off the sterering wheel of the car, take out the engine, ok now it rearranges itself into a bicycle or something. idk, the thing with viruses is that since they're not alive, they could basically just sit around forever doing nothing, like an acorn on the ground. Then when someone pics it up to eat it, they get their life jacked. And it just goes on and on.

Viruses can make themselves look like benign obejects to the cells in our body. Or they can emulate themselves to look just like friendly parts of our own body, so in that case whatever drug you use to attack the virus is going to kill the person too.
keeping it real we have at most 200 years to fix our shyt before humanity falls apart. in a century the world will probably be a shythole unless we can find an answer to pollution, destruction of environments, corruption, war, overpopulation, all this artificial shyt giving us cancer an malnutrition an depression, etc.
 

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Yeah, I've been interested in this for awhile. It's amazing, yet frightening.
 

Dusty Bake Activate

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hahaha tv got me careful as fukk i feel u on fresh water. u dont see nikkas gettin parasites only white ppl climbin trees in the jungle an eating at shytty food stands in other countries an rock climbin

srsly white people have the worst survival instincts
I've actually seen a few black people on the show, but it's always some freak accident shyt with them. You only see white people doing crazy shyt like swimming in dirty ass ponds in the middle of the woods. I seen this one redneck dude up there one time who got a parasite from eating raw crawfish, right out of the river. :snoop:
 
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