Daily Express

50,000 Britons die each year from sepsis

- By Hanna Geissler Health Reporter

SEPSIS is now a bigger killer worldwide than cancer – with more than double the number of deaths than previously estimated, a study suggests.

And the UK has one of the worst infection rates in Europe with 50,000 people a year dying of the condition.

Globally, it was linked to 11 million deaths in 2017, compared with 9.6 million deaths from cancer in 2018.

Every three seconds someone dies from the condition, which accounts for almost a fifth of deaths globally.

Half of all cases were in children and adolescent­s, according to the study published in The Lancet.

It warns fatalities could rise if new ways to tackle antibiotic resistance are not found quickly.

Alarming

Sepsis, a form of blood poisoning, occurs when the body responds poorly to a bacterial infection and attacks its own tissue and organs. It needs speedy treatment in hospital with antibiotic­s or patients’ organs fail.

There were 48.9 million cases and 11 million deaths across 195 countries in 2017, according to the Global Burden of Disease Report.

The figures are a huge leap on the 19.4 million cases and 5.3 million deaths suggested by a smaller survey published the year before.

And the UK’s stats were worse than any EU nation except Portugal and the Ukraine. Britain was 132 out of the 195 countries listed by their estimated death rates from highest to lowest, with 71.8 deaths per 100,000 people.

But we performed far worse – 45th – when it came to the total of estimated deaths – which researcher­s put at 47,860 out of 245,783 cases.

The 10 countries with the highest death rates were all in Africa, according to the study of data by Pittsburgh and Washington universiti­es.

The UK Sepsis Trust said the rise was likely due to better recording the condition, as well as antibiotic resistance and an ageing population meaning more older people are affected. But chief executive Dr Ron Daniels said sepsis was one of our biggest healthcare problems and the scale of the problem in children was “alarming”.

Last year, it emerged that hospital admissions for the disease in England had more than doubled in three years, with 350,344 recorded in 2017/18.

SEPSIS is a lethal threat to which the world is only now waking up. Nearly 50,000 people a year are killed by it in the UK alone, according to a landmark report. Sepsis is preventabl­e and treatable. It must be a priority for ministers and everyone working in public health to stop this condition needlessly claiming lives.

There were 11 million global sepsis deaths in 2017 and in England the number of hospital admissions has more than doubled in three years.

The statistics are startling and families across Britain are grieving for lost loved ones. The difficulty of tackling sepsis is exacerbate­d by rising antibiotic resistance and the challenges that come with an ageing population.

But when sepsis, which occurs when the body responds badly to a bacterial infection and attacks its own organs and tissue, is killing someone around the world once every three seconds, it is imperative that we do not duck this challenge.

This is a bigger killer than cancer. Just as we rightly expect countries to collaborat­e to combat terrorism and other threats to our national security, we should grasp the opportunit­y to save millions of lives.

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 ?? Picture: SWNS ?? Laura lost baby Luchii after he was wrongly diagnosed with a chest infection
Picture: SWNS Laura lost baby Luchii after he was wrongly diagnosed with a chest infection

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