The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Antimicrob­ial resistance: A threat to humanity

- With Dr Johannes Marisa

The Global Research on Antimicrob­ial Resistance estimated that in 2019 alone, 1,27 million deaths were directly attributed to drug-resistant infections while about 4,95 million deaths were associated with antimicrob­ial resistance. This is unfortunat­e considerin­g the rampant use of drugs globally, especially during this Covid-19 era where many people self-prescribed antibiotic­s, anti-fungals, anti-protozoa and even anti-parasitic medication. Drugs like Azithromyc­in, Doxycline, Ciprofloxa­cin, Clindamyci­n, Aciclovir became household names as people tried to contain the heinous Covid-19.

Antimicrob­ial resistance occurs when microbes evolve mechanisms that protect them from the effects of antimicrob­ials. The term antibiotic resistance applies to bacteria that become resistant to antibiotic­s. All classes of microbes can evolve resistance. Fungi evolve antifungal resistance, viruses evolve antiviral resistance, protozoa evolve antiprotoz­oal resistance, and bacteria evolve antibiotic resistance.

Resistance in bacteria can arise naturally by genetic mutation, or by one species acquiring resistance from another. Resistance can appear spontaneou­sly because of random mutations; However, extended use of antimicrob­ials appears to encourage selection for mutations which can render antimicrob­ials ineffectiv­e.

What causes antimicrob­ial resistance Self-medication

The Covid-19 pandemic has caused a significan­t rise in cases of antimicrob­ial resistance as a result of the several trials and overuse of different classes of drugs as well as greater access to antibiotic drugs. This is worrisome because the health sector might be facing the imminent consequenc­e of antimicrob­ial resistance. Self-medication has contribute­d massively to this situation. In an effort to manage their own illness. Patients take the advice of false media sources, friends, and family, causing them to take antimicrob­ials unnecessar­ily or in excess.

Clinical misuse

Misuse by healthcare profession­als is another cause leading to increased antimicrob­ial resistance. Studies done by the CDC show that the agent used, and the duration of therapy was incorrect in up to 50% of the cases studied. In another study done in an intensive care unit in a major hospital in France, it was shown that 30% to 60% of antibiotic­s were unnecessar­y.

These inappropri­ate uses of antimicrob­ial agent promote the evolution of antimicrob­ial resistance by supporting the bacteria in developing genetic alteration­s leading to resistance. This demonstrat­es how a majority of doctors underestim­ate the impact that their own prescribin­g habits have on antimicrob­ial resistance as a whole. It also confirms that some physicians may be overly cautious when it comes to prescribin­g antibiotic­s for both medical and legal reasons, even when indication for use for these medication­s is not always confirmed. This can lead to unnecessar­y antimicrob­ial use.

Environmen­tal pollution

Untreated effluents from pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ing industries, hospitals and clinics, and inappropri­ate disposal of unused or expires medication can expose microbes in the environmen­t to antibiotic­s and trigger the evolution of resistance. This therefore calls for suitable disposal of medical waste.

Livestock

The antimicrob­ial crisis also extends to the food industry, specifical­ly with food producing animals. Antibiotic­s are fed to livestock to act as growth supplement­s, and a preventati­ve measure to decrease the likelihood of infections. This results in the transfer of resistant bacterial strains into the food that humans eat, causing potentiall­y fatal transfer of disease.

While this practice does result in better yields and meat products, it is a major issue in terms of preventing antimicrob­ial resistance. Though the evidence linking antimicrob­ial usage in livestock to antimicrob­ial resistance is limited, the World Health Organisati­on Advisory Group on Integrated Surveillan­ce of Antimicrob­ial Resistance strongly recommend the reduction of use of medically important antimicrob­ials in livestock. Several countries have restricted the use of antibiotic­s in livestock, including Canada, China, Japan, and the US. These restrictio­ns are sometimes associated with a reduction of the prevalence of antimicrob­ial resistance in humans.

Pesticides

Most pesticides protect crops against insects and plants, but in some cases antimicrob­ial pesticides are used to protect against various microorgan­isms such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, algae, and protozoa. The overuse of many pesticides in an effort to have a higher yield of crops has resulted in many of these microbes evolving a tolerance against these antimicrob­ial agents. Currently, there are over 4000 antimicrob­ial pesticides registered and sold to the market, showing the widespread use of these agents. It is estimated that for every single meal a person consumes, 0.3g of pesticides is used, as 90% of all pesticide use is in agricultur­e.

How to prevent antimicrob­ial resistance

People should use anti-microbes only when prescribed by their clinicians, completing the full prescripti­on, even if they feel better, never to share anti-microbes with

people who may not even require them.

Antibiotic treatment duration should be based on the infection and other health problems a person may have. In Zimbabwe, many people have abused antibiotic­s like Amoxyl, Ciprofloxa­cin, Cotrimoxaz­ole, Erythromyc­in, Doxycline, using them for even viral infections. For prescripti­on drugs, the prescriber should closely adhere to the five rights of drug administra­tion: the right patient, the right drug, the right dose, the right route, and the right time.

Cultures should be taken before treatment when indicated and treatment potentiall­y changed based on the susceptibi­lity report.

Manufactur­es of antimicrob­ials need to improve the treatment of their wastewater to reduce the release of residues into the environmen­t.

Let us remain vigilant about Covid-19 as we are at risk of the fifth wave within the next three months.

 ?? ?? The Covid-19 pandemic has caused a significan­t rise in cases of antimicrob­ial resistance
The Covid-19 pandemic has caused a significan­t rise in cases of antimicrob­ial resistance
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe