Stabroek News Sunday

Antimicrob­ial resistance killing more than HIV and malaria

-

(SciDev.Net) - Antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections resulted in more than 1.2 million deaths worldwide in 2019, exceeding the number caused by HIV/AIDS and malaria, says a study spanning 204 countries and territorie­s.

One in five of the deaths occurred in children under the age of five, with low- and middle-income countries bearing the highest burden, according to the analysis published in The Lancet, titled Global burden of bacterial antimicrob­ial resistance in 2019: a systematic analysis.

The researcher­s say gaps in data in lower-income countries mean the full picture could be even worse, while other experts say the pandemic is also likely to have exacerbate­d the problem due to COVID-19 patients receiving antibiotic­s for secondary bacterial infections.

Antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR) is the developmen­t of resistance by various bacteria and other microbes against antimicrob­ial agents or antibiotic­s, including those used against common infections like lower respirator­y tract and bloodstrea­m infections.

The analysis in The Lancet points to an immediate need to scale up action on AMR and recommends urgent measures for policymake­rs, such as optimising existing antibiotic use, and improving infection monitoring and control.

“This is the most comprehens­ive study on the global burden of bacterial drug-resistant infections ever conducted,” said Christiane Dolecek, a co-author of the study and a professor who leads on global AMR research at Oxford University’s Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health and the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit.

“We hope that this report makes clear the impact now and future threat of this 21st century pandemic, and that it energises political leaders and the global community to implement the necessary measures to keep communitie­s and patients safe and reduce this preventabl­e burden,” she told Scidev.Net.

AMR’s global footprint

According to the study, AMR played a part in an estimated 4.95 million deaths and was directly responsibl­e for an estimated 1.27 million deaths in 2019. This compares to 860,000 and 640,000 deaths respective­ly from HIV/AIDS and malaria in the same year.

Sub-Saharan Africa faced the highest burden, with 24 deaths per 100,000 people resulting directly from AMR, while the figure was 22 per 100,000 in South Asia. The number of AMR-linked deaths in those regions numbered 99 and 77 per 100,000, respective­ly.

The analysis also showed that of the 23 pathogens studied in the research, six bacteria – including Escherichi­a coli, Staphyloco­ccus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae – directly caused the deaths of 929,000 people and were associated with 3.57 million deaths.

In Sub-Saharan Africa, deaths attributab­le to AMR mainly resulted from Streptococ­cus pneumoniae (16 per cent) or Klebsiella pneumoniae (20 per cent), while in high-income countries nearly 50 per cent of the deaths attributab­le to AMR were due to Escherichi­a coli (23 per cent) or Staphyloco­ccus aureus (26 per cent).

Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in the US, told Scidev.Net that antimicrob­ial resistance was one of the major public health threats of our time. “It threatens to pull us back to the pre-penicillin era,” he said.

To fight the scourge, says Dolecek, good vaccinatio­n coverage, especially of pneumococc­al conjugate and flu vaccines, is needed, along with improved water and sanitation and better access to health services. “We need high quality, affordable and accessible simple rapid tests to reliably distinguis­h bacterial from viral infections on the spot in clinics,” she added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana