Showing posts with label antibiotics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antibiotics. Show all posts

Thursday, February 18, 2016

A Brief History Of Antibiotic Resistance

The Grapevine

A Brief History Of Antibiotic Resistance: How A Medical Miracle Turned Into The Biggest Public Health Danger Of Our Time


The discovery of penicillin marked the advent of the age of antibiotics, 
an era where previously deadly infectious diseases could be cured in days. Wikimedia

1955. As Fleming had predicted, resistance to penicillin gradually built up due to the accessibility of the drug. By 1955, many countries had attempted to slow this resistance by limiting penicillin use to prescription only, but it was too little too late: many bacterial strains had already defeated the antibiotic, including staphylococci.

1960. In an attempt to defeat penicillin-resistant strains, scientists developed methicillin, a different antibiotic in the penicillin class that could work against resistance. But within a year, bacterial strains developed resistance to methicillin too — eventually called MRSA , methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus , or S. aureus . Now, MRSA can resist most antibiotics, and infections are common in hospitals — making it one of the biggest forerunners of multiple-drug resistant (MDR) bacteria.
For decades, poultry and other animal farms utilized antibiotics
freely in feed to promote growth.
 Reuters
1990s. A stronger resistant strain of MRSA began sickening normal, healthy people in the 1990s. This perhaps created a greater public awareness of the danger of antimicrobial resistance.
In the midst of emerging superbugs and MDR bacteria, the CDC and other
public health organizations began issuing public service announcements
to curb the liberal use of antibiotics.
 CDC / Wikimedia
2012. As more researchers began working on the impending antibiotic-resistant epidemic, they had to tackle the classification of multidrug-resistant bacteria, which were multiplying by the minute. In a 2012 study, a team of scientists proposed adding the terms extensively drug-resistant (XDR) and pandrug-resistant (PDR) to multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria to better help them classify and potentially defeat these superbugs. It was the first time that researchers had a unified set of definitions for MDR bacteria to better understand them.

The danger of the situation is mainly in its complexity, Rustav Aminov writes in a 2010 report on antibiotic resistance: “It is not a single grand challenge; it is rather a complex problem requiring concerted efforts of microbiologists, ecologists, health care specialists, educationalists, policy makers, legislative bodies, agricultural and pharmaceutical industry workers, and the public to deal with. In fact, this should be of everyone's concern, because, in the end, there is always a probability for any of us at some stage to get infected with a pathogen that is resistant to antibiotic treatment.”

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Whooping cough alert


Whooping cough alert: Get a booster before school starts
Pertussis remains a major problem, so make sure your child is protected


Reprinted from consumerreports.org
Last updated: August 06, 2015 08:45 AM


The words “whooping cough” conjure up a bygone era of gravely sick babies and desperate parents hoping their feverish, hacking children make it through the night. The devastating disease, called pertussis, is characterized by several weeks, or even months, of low-grade fever and incessant bouts of rapid coughing that have a "whoop" sound (you can listen to it here) as the child tries desperately to expel thick throat mucus. At its worst, the disease can bring on pneumonia and, due to lack of oxygen during the coughing spells, even seizures and death.

Well, it’s back. Last year, there were 17,873 cases of pertussis reported to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And so far in 2015 there have been 10,209 cases reported. In fact, the number of pertussis cases has been steadily rising since the 1980s, hitting a 50-year high of 48,277 in 2012. Why would a disease that had nearly been wiped out after a highly effective vaccine was introduced in the 1940s now be making a comeback?

Experts aren’t entirely sure, but point to a variety of causes, including more parents choosing not to vaccinate their children. That failure, in turn, has allowed for the extremely contagious Bordetella pertussis bacteria to circulate more freely.

The vaccine’s effectiveness also appears to wane over time. A 2015 review of studies in the journal Pediatrics concluded that the vast majority of children who had been vaccinated in their first years of life were no longer protected against pertussis by the time they received their scheduled Tdap booster in their teens. One possible explanation for this loss of immunity is that new strains of B. pertussis may have developed since the current vaccine was first introduced in 1991.

The CDC is now analyzing data from around the country to see if it should change recommendations for how often people need to be vaccinated or receive booster shots.

In the meantime, our advice remains unchanged: All children should have the entire five-shot series of DTaP (diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis) vaccinations between the ages of 2 months and enrollment in kindergarten. Adolescents, adults, and pregnant women (ideally between 27 and 36 weeks) should get a Tdap booster shot if they’re unsure if they’ve had one—unless, of course, they’ve previously had a severe (and extremely rare) allergic reaction.

If your child develops pertussis, antibiotics remain the treatment of choice. But while the antibiotics long used to treat confirmed cases of pertussis continue to work well, some pockets of antibiotic-resistant strains of B. pertussis have been reported. (Read more about the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.)

It doesn't really matter whether you get vaccinated at your doctor's office or at your local pharmacy. The important thing is to just get vaccinated.

—Chris Hendel

Thursday, July 30, 2015

#SlamSuperbugs

Today Consumer Reports released the second magazine article in the three-part series on America's antibiotic crisis. This article, entitled How Your Hospital Can Make You Sick.It follows last month's article (The Rise of Superbugs), which was the first in our series. 

CR has been tweeting all day in English under the hashtag #SlamSuperbugs and in Spanish under the hashtag #AdiosSuperbacterias. Please join on Twitter and add your voice to the conversation. 

Please feel free to share these magazine articles widely with your family and friends as we all work together to curb the use of unneeded antibiotics. 

You can also go to the Consumer Reports e-hub on antibiotics to access patient-facing and Choosing Wisely-related materials on antibiotics. 

Thursday, March 20, 2014

The Good, The Bad, The Ugly - Antibiotics (Carrington.edu)

http://carrington.edu/blog/medical/good-bad-ugly-antibiotics/

By: 

If you’ve been ill with anything more than the common cold in your lifetime, chances are you’ve been prescribed or told to take an antibiotic. From bronchitis to a staphylococcus, if it’s an infection, antibiotics can likely be used to treat it. But almost nothing is full proof when it comes to medicine. We’ve broken it down for you by exploring the good, the bad, and the ugly sides to antibiotics.


So what do antibiotics do, exactly? Three things, primarily: They break down bacterial infections, which is when the bad kind of bacteria reproduce and emit harmful chemicals that cause tissue damage. They also work against fungal infections like mold, which gets into the air and goes into your lungs. Finally, they work against certain parasites, or organisms that have taken on a life inside of you. Many people are prescribed antibiotics for various reasons at any given time.
But the problem with antibiotics is that as soon as our bodies take them in, we begin to build up a resistance to them. In fact, the more you take, the more likely you are to develop an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection. One case study showed that out of 80,000 cases of MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus), 11,000 people died of the infection.
What’s even worse is that those are just from a particular case study. A larger census shows that more than 23,000 Americans each year die from various types of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. And on top of that, approximately half the time, people are prescribed antibiotics when they don’t really need them.
You’ve probably heard about antibiotics in our meat. The majority of the antibiotics that are purchased each year are used in animal feed. We do this because it is said to help the animals grow faster and, when treated properly, antibiotics will fight off existing infections, and prevent new ones.
The Good The Bad The Ugly - Antibiotics
Click on link to view larger graph.
http://carrington.edu/blog/medical/good-bad-ugly-antibiotics/

But both the Center for Disease Control and the Food and Drug Administration feel that this is far too much treatment for the meat, and for us, and have advised farmers to phase out its usage. If the animals are consuming a lot of antibiotics, they too will then be more likely to develop antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which can then be transferred to us through consumption. Furthermore, the improper preparation of meat is very dangerous, and a 2013 outbreak of Salmonella caused the hospitalization of more than 150 people from one farm’s livestock.
So if we didn’t have antibiotics, what would happen? One case study conducted in Germany showed that when animals were taken off of food that contained antibiotics, their feces contained less harmful bacteria than before. However, another study found that when more animals were getting sick, more human were also getting sick, and antibiotics might have helped to curb this.
When all is said and done, antibiotics have prevented many, many deaths. Before antibiotics were introduced, 9 out of 10 children with bacterial meningitis died from the illness. And after we began using them? These days, only 1 in 10 will die from the bacterial infection. Those numbers speak for themselves.
This educational graphic on antibiotics was development by Carrington’s pharmacy technician training program. Learn more about pharmacy technology and other health care career training programs by contacting us.