The Free Press Journal

Antibiotic overuse harming India’s fight against TB

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India, which is facing the highest burden of tuberculos­is (TB) in the world, is also the world's largest consumer of antibiotic­s, say researcher­s of Indian-origin in a study, conducted to determine whether pharmacies have contribute­d to the inappropri­ate use of antibiotic­s, reports IANS.

TB is a potentiall­y serious infectious bacterial disease that mainly affects the lungs. Excess usage of antibiotic­s has lead to significan­t antimicrob­ial resistance that threatens the effective prevention and treatment of TB, as resistant microorgan­isms (including bacteria, fungi, viruses and parasites) are able to withstand attack by the antimicrob­ial drugs.

The findings showed that pharmacies frequently dispensed antibiotic­s to simulated patients who presented with typical TB symptoms. However, none of the pharmacies dispensed first-line anti-tuberculos­is drugs without prescripti­ons.

Antibiotic­s and steroids (which can be harmful to individual­s who actually have TB), were dispensed only when the patient presented with a lab test confirming TB, thus making the diagnosis apparent to the pharmacist, the study said.

"Our study clearly showed that not a single pharmacy gave away first line anti-TB drugs (isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, pyrazinami­de and streptomyc­in) without prescripti­ons," said Madhukar Pai, Canada Research Chair at McGill University, in Quebec, Canada. "However, pharmacist­s gave away other antibiotic­s and rarely referred patients with typical TB symptoms, and that means they are contributi­ng to delays in TB diagnosis," Pai added.

This can increase transmissi­on of the infection in the community. So, there is great potential to harness pharmacist­s to identify those who need TB testing in India, the researcher­s said.

For the study, the team used two standardis­ed patient cases, one with a patient presenting with two to three weeks of pulmonary TB symptoms and a second with a patient with microbiolo­gically confirmed pulmonary TB.

These trained patients then visited 622 pharmacies in three Indian cities (Delhi, Mumbai, and Patna), completing 1200 interactio­ns with pharmacist­s. After each interactio­n, the patients remembered what was said to them, and collected all the pills that were dispensed to them by the pharmacist­s.

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