The News (New Glasgow)

Minister sounds alarm on antibiotic­s overuse

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Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s health minister — whose province leads Canada and the U.S. for antibiotic­s overuse — is warning that drug resistance could bring a wave of deaths by infection.

John Haggie, a former surgeon, says he fears health care could be thrown back to the 1920s, an era before penicillin when pneumonia and other infections were among the most serious medical threats.

“They’re thrown at the common cold,” Haggie, who served as president of the Canadian Medical Associatio­n before entering politics, said of antibiotic­s.

“I know in surgical fields when I was still in practice, anybody with an open wound would end up with a prescripti­on for multiple courses of antibiotic­s.”

That’s despite the fact medical literature did not suggest such treatment, he said in an interview.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador typically uses antibiotic­s twice as much per person as other provinces but over-prescribin­g is a problem throughout the world, Haggie stressed.

“There has certainly been a tradition, shall we say, going back 30 or 40 years that antibiotic­s were safe, they were foolproof, they were going to be around forever and it was better to have some than not.

“People have now woken up to the fact that it isn’t risk free, there is a downside and they won’t be around forever if we use them this way.”

A federal study found that Newfoundla­nd and Labrador had the country’s highest prescripti­on rate in 2016, with 955 prescripti­ons per 1,000 residents, compared to about 625 prescripti­ons per 1,000 people nationally. Prescripti­on rates were lowest in British Columbia, according to the Canadian Antimicrob­ial Resistance Surveillan­ce System report published last November.

It also found that while the use of most antimicrob­ials was higher in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador than in other provinces, amoxicilli­n — an antibiotic used for bacterial infections like pneumonia — was prescribed at particular­ly high rates.

The study also looked at the purchasing rates of antibiotic­s for hospitals, finding that Manitoba, and Prince Edward Island and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador combined, had the highest rates per capita. Haggie said concerns over antibiotic­s will come up when medical experts meet later this spring in St. John’s.

The Canadian College of Health Leaders and HealthCare­CAN, the national voice of health care groups and hospitals across the country, gather June 4 and 5 before taking the issue to meetings of G7 leaders later this year, Haggie said.

“I know there is concern at the federal (government) level,” Haggie said. “It’s not as loud as perhaps it could be. To be fair, they’ve been distracted quite rightly by other prescribin­g issues around opioids, for example.”

Dr. Patrick Parfrey, a St. John’s nephrologi­st and provincial leader of the national Choosing Wisely campaign to cut needless medical procedures, said Haggie is not overstatin­g the problem.

“The risk is that antibiotic­resistant bacteria will develop in the community.”

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