Spread of Drug-Resistant Superbugs Surging, WHO Warns
- The World Health Organization warned on Oct 13 that nearly 40% of antibiotics became ineffective between 2018 and 2023 after analyzing more than 23m bacterial infections from 104 countries.
- Rampant misuse of antibiotics in humans, animals and food production, weak surveillance in many countries, and a thin tests and treatments pipeline have driven the rise in resistance in recent years.
- WHO data show drug resistance caused 4.71 million deaths, with 1.14 million directly attributed, and in 2023 one in six infections showed antibiotic resistance.
- The WHO warned failing antibiotic effectiveness makes minor injuries and common infections potentially deadly, with the highest resistance in the South-east Asian and Eastern Mediterranean regions and 48 per cent of countries not reporting AMR data.
- Dr Manica Balasegaram warned that AMR deaths could rise 70 percent by 2050 as resistance to third-generation cephalosporins hits 40% in E. coli and 55% in Klebsiella pneumoniae among eight common bacterial pathogens.
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The World Health Organization warns that the growing resistance of bacterial infections to key antibiotics poses a threat to global health.
Africa: Antibiotic Resistance Surges Globally, UN Health Agency Warns
Common infections are becoming harder - and sometimes impossible - to treat, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Monday, as new data show that one in six bacterial infections globally are resistant to standard antibiotics, endangering millions and straining health systems worldwide.
Agency Warns That Superbugs Are Outpacing Antibiotics
The World Health Organization issued a stark warning on Monday about the rising threat of drug-resistant bacterial infections around the globe. The health agency said one in six bacterial infections confirmed by laboratories in 2023 no longer responded to standard antibiotic treatments, raising alarms about the future effectiveness of medicines...
WHO warns of surge in drug-resistant bacterial infections
Related video above: How common are parasitic worm infections? (NewsNation) — The World Health Organization is sounding the alarm on the rising number of drug-resistant bacterial infections. In a report published Monday, the WHO said 1 in 6 lab-confirmed bacterial infections did not respond to antibiotic treatments. WHO examined resistance prevalence estimates for 22 antibiotics used to treat infections of the urinary and gastrointestinal tracts…
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