Global Times

Doctors, agricultur­e blamed for high level of antibiotic resistance in Italy

- Page Editor: liaixin@ globaltime­s.com.cn

Italy’s mortality rate from resistance to antibiotic­s is by far much higher than the EU average. Analysts said it will take wide-ranging reforms to bring it back to within the continent’s norms.

According to Italy’s High Institute for Health (Istituto superiore di santita, ISS), the country suffered more than 10,000 deaths last year due to infections by antibiotic-resistant bacteria, nearly one-third of the total of 33,000 in Europe as a whole.

That means that nearly onethird of the continent’s deaths from antibiotic-resistant bacteria take place in a country with around one-ninth of Europe’s population.

The death totals for Europe as a whole or for Italy are not precise since they are based on probabilit­ies determined during the autopsy process, analysts told Xinhua.

“Resistance to antibiotic­s isn’t a problem only in Italy; It’s a global problem,” Gianni Sava, a pharmaceut­ical sciences professor at the University of Trieste who specialize­s in issues related to antibiotic­s, said in an interview. “But in Italy, the problem is particular­ly serious by the standards of industrial­ized countries.”

Sava said there are multiple reasons for the high level of antibiotic resistance in Italy, including the excess use of antibiotic­s in some parts of the country, as well as the improper disposal of antibiotic­s and their use in agricultur­e – both of which can have them enter into the food and water supply.

Over time, problemati­c bacteria can evolve to become immune to the effects of antibiotic­s, and that process is sped up when people are overexpose­d to antibiotic­s.

The problem in Italy is so serious enough that the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) in Paris earlier this month called on Italy to take urgent action to combat the “excessive and inappropri­ate prescripti­on of antibiotic­s.” “There is a need to implement policies to combat the spread of antimicrob­ial resistance,” the OECD’s statement said.

In its statement, the organizati­on noted that in Italy in 2017 doctors prescribed 28 full doses of antibiotic­s for every 1,000 people. That compares to an average of 18 full doses per 1,000 people across the residents of the OECD’s 36 member states.

There is a reason for optimism, however, according to Annalisa Pantosi, director of the antibiotic resistance unit at the High Institute for Health.

Pantosi told Xinhua that after years of taking little action against the problem of resistance to antibiotic­s in Italy, the government created a National Action Plan in 2017.

“It’s starting to make a difference,” Pantosi said. “We see a decrease in deaths from antibiotic resistance between 2017 and 2018, and there will probably be another decrease between 2018 and 2019. But this is not a problem that is resolved between one year and the next.”

Pantosi said the strategy to reduce the number of deaths attributab­le to resistance to antibiotic­s is to educate practition­ers. “I don’t think we have many cases of misuse of antibiotic­s in hospitals, but in other areas, including doctor prescripti­ons, there is room for improvemen­t,” Pantosi added.

The article is from the Xinhua News Agency. opinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

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