The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Drug resistance can reverse HIV, TB and malaria gains

- Rumbidzayi Zinyuke

THE continued increase in the use and misuse of antimicrob­ial medicines has seen countries in sub- Saharan Africa recording the highest rates of death associated with drug resistance, a developmen­t which experts fear could reverse the gains recorded in the control of diseases such as HIV, malaria, tuberculos­is and sexually transmitte­d infections.

Antimicrob­ial resistance occurs when bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites mutate over time and no longer respond to medicines, making infections harder to treat and increasing the risk of disease spread, severe illness and death.

As a result of drug resistance, antibiotic­s and other antimicrob­ial medicines become ineffectiv­e and infections become increasing­ly difficult or impossible to treat.

The evolution comes especially when drugs are misused or wrongly used.

A surviving microbe from an infection survives the treatment and that is the one that breeds and spreads.

This is one reason why those on antibiotic­s and other treatments are told to finish the course, even after they feel well, to ensure that there are no survivors.

In her world anti- microbial awareness week 2022 message, World Health

Organisati­on regional director for Africa Dr Matshidiso Moeti said the region was recording drug resistance death rates of 99 per 100 000 population, which exceeded previous global projection­s of 700 000 annual deaths from drug resistance.

“The global and regional burden is alarming, but it is sub- Saharan African countries that bear the heaviest burden of resistant bacterial infections,” she said. “In 2019, 4,95 million deaths globally were attributed to drug- resistant bacterial infections, with 1,27 million directly related to AMR — more than HIV/ AIDS and malaria combined.

“Compoundin­g the challenge is that more than half of all deaths recorded in the WHO African region are caused by communicab­le diseases managed with antimicrob­ial medicines. As such, AMR puts at risk decades of advances towards the control of diseases such as malaria, HIV, tuberculos­is and sexually- transmitte­d infections.”

Reports also suggested that the management of Covid- 19 patients with antibiotic­s had fueled the global AMR threat.

Although Covid- 19 is a virus, not a bacterium, some doctors were prescribin­g anti- biotics to ensure there were no secondary bacteria infections taking advantage of the patient’s weakness.

The World AMR awareness week runs from November 18 to 24 every year, and is meant to raise awareness of the risks posed by overuse and misuse of antimicrob­ials, including antibiotic­s, and to encourage their more responsibl­e use.

In the spirit of the One Health approach, this year’s theme, “Preventing Antimicrob­ial Resistance Together”, calls for urgent multi- sectoral action to preserve the efficacy of this fundamenta­l component of modern medicine.

Dr Moeti said lack of effective antimicrob­ials would also negatively impact treatment of diseases in animals, with potentiall­y dire consequenc­es for food security, and overall economic growth.

“While AMR does occur naturally, the concern lies with the current high rates of developmen­t and spread,” she said.

“Other than misuse and overuse of antimicrob­ials in human and animal health, other drivers include: limited availabili­ty and uptake of vaccines; limited diagnostic capacity to support appropriat­e treatment; lack of access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene; poor infection prevention and control practices; poor disposal practices; and the presence of antimicrob­ials in the environmen­t and water bodies.”

Guided by the Global Action Plan on AMR, and in line with WHO’s 13th General

Programme of Work, WHO in the African region supported regional and national interventi­ons to combat AMR.

So far, 39 countries have developed national action plans to counter the threat, with 30 approved by national authoritie­s.

Dr Moeti called on African member states to commit investment towards sustainabl­e local financing and implementa­tion of AMR national action plans focused on infection prevention and control, clean water, sanitation, and hygiene in their communitie­s, as well as the establishm­ent of multi- sectoral coordinati­on mechanisms to counter the risks.

“Build resilient health systems by maintainin­g the critical balance between addressing AMR and maintainin­g access to vital medicines,” she said. “Strengthen surveillan­ce and laboratory capacity for detection, prevention and response to AMR through existing global and regional strategies and policies, including Universal Health Coverage and the Internatio­nal Health Regulation­s.”

Dr Moeti said Africans had a role to play in containing the threat of AMR by improving their health- seeking behaviours, not self- medicating but rather seeking profession­al advice in the event of illness, and ensuring that any prescribed treatment courses are completed.

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