Antibiotic resistance lasts up to 12 months
May 19th, 2010 - 12:56 pm ICT by ANILondon, May 19 (ANI): Patients who take prescribed antibiotics in primary care can go on to develop a resistance lasting up to a year, according to a study.
It is known that resistance to antibiotics is a major threat to public health.
However, researchers aid that this is not seen by most clinicians or patients as a reason to refrain from using them, with many regarding the problem as minimal.
To address a lack of systematic reviews in the area, the authors analysed 24 existing studies of resistance in individual patients prescribed antibiotics in primary care, mainly for respiratory or urinary infections.
They found strong evidence that individuals prescribed an antibiotic in primary care for a respiratory or urinary infection develop a resistance.
The effect is greatest in the month immediately after treatment, but may last for up to a year, and this residual effect may be a driver for high levels of resistance in the community.
The review provides the evidence needed to quantify the link between individual prescribing decisions and the problem of resistance, concluded the authors.
They say it highlights that the only way to avoid the “vicious cycle of resistance” is to avoid the initial use of antibiotics wherever possible.
However, they also call for more clinical trials to strengthen the evidence base.
In an accompanying analysis, two specialists in economics and health policy argue that new antibiotics to tackle multi-drug resistant bacteria are much needed.
They show how financial incentives might be used to persuade drug companies to develop new antibiotics, and suggest that such action needs to be accompanied by efforts to tackle overuse of antibiotics, which is currently fuelling the spread of resistant bacteria.
Three international experts reiterated the above views in an editorial and called for economic strategies to bring new drugs to market, and to conserve existing antibacterials.
“Nothing less than the future of medicine, from organ transplants to chemotherapy, is at stake, and there will be no second chances,” the British Medical Journal quoted them as concluding.
The study has been published on bmj.com. (ANI)
- Antibiotics have long-lasting impacts on gut bacteria: Study - Nov 02, 2010
- Antibiotics do little to ease acute cough - Mar 25, 2011
- WHO calls for dealing with multi-drug resistant microbes - Apr 07, 2011
- Unique coating kills 99 percent bugs - May 11, 2012
- Antibiotics ineffective against viral sinus infections - Mar 22, 2012
- Honey can help reverse bacterial resistance to antibiotics - Apr 13, 2011
- Antibiotics of no use in sinus infections - Feb 15, 2012
- Chemists in four states to down shutters Aug 1 - Jul 23, 2011
- Antibiotic-resistant superbugs 'could take us to pre-Penicillin era' - Apr 07, 2011
- Combination therapy shows promise in treating devastating cystic fibrosis - Apr 25, 2011
- Gonorrhea cure gets tough as bug grows drug resistant - Nov 08, 2011
- How honey kills bacteria - Jul 01, 2010
- Antibiotics 'do little to alleviate acute cough' - Mar 25, 2011
- Docs 'misuse' antibiotics when treating patients with respiratory infections - Sep 23, 2010
- Superbug does not pose risk: Health ministry (Lead) - Apr 07, 2011
Tags: antibiotic resistance, clinical trials, clinicians, drug resistant bacteria, drugs to market, economic strategies, evidence base, financial incentives, health policy, international experts, new antibiotics, new drugs, overuse of antibiotics, primary care, residual effect, systematic reviews, urinary infection, urinary infections, use of antibiotics, vicious cycle