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Deadly Tipping Point: The Looming Antibiotic Resistance Crisis That Could Claim 39 Million Lives in Just 25 Years

Deadly Tipping Point: The Looming Antibiotic Resistance Crisis That Could Claim 39 Million Lives in Just 25 Years

September 18, 2024 Catherine Williams - Chief Editor Entertainment

Antibiotic Overuse: A Looming Global‌ Health Crisis

International Research Team Predicts‍ Alarming Consequences of​ Antibiotic Resistance

Antibiotic ResistanceThe world⁣ is facing an ‘antibiotic ⁣resistance crisis’ due to‌ the overuse of antibiotics.⁢ It is​ alarming to ⁣think that antibiotics can pose a serious⁢ threat to our lives without​ us even realizing it.

The problem ​of ‘antibiotic resistance’, which threatens lives because antibiotics do not work due to overuse,​ is imminent. A study found that more than 39 million people⁣ worldwide will ⁣die ‌directly due to antibiotic resistance​ between 2025 and 2050.

An international research team, including the University of⁢ Washington ⁢in ⁤the United States and the​ Norwegian ​Institute of Public Health, announced the results ‍of an in-depth analysis⁢ of the impact of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) ‌on 204 countries and regions around the world over time.

According to the research results, more than 1 million people died ⁣each year worldwide from 1990 to 2021 due to direct⁤ causes of ‌antibiotic resistance. During this period, the AMR mortality rate in children under 5 years of age decreased by about‌ 50%, while the AMR mortality ⁣rate in the elderly over 70 ⁣years of age ​increased by​ more than 80%. In​ particular, the number of deaths⁤ due to AMR, including the elderly,‍ is expected to increase steadily over the next several decades, and the AMR mortality rate is expected to ‌increase by‍ about 70% ‍in 2050 compared to 2022.

The research team‌ predicted ⁤that the total number of deaths ⁤(deaths due to direct and indirect causes) caused by ‘AMR germs (bacteria)’ will increase by ‌about‍ 75%‌ from about 4.71⁣ million to about 8.22 million per year between 2025 and ‌2050. Study ⁣co-author Dr. Mohsen Naghavi (Director ⁣of the AMR Research Team ⁢at the Institute for Health Metrics and Research) at the University of Washington said, “We are concerned that about 39 million people will die directly due to antibiotic resistance and about ⁢169 million people will die from indirect ‍causes ⁢between 2025 and 2050.”

The research team, ​however,‍ predicted that by taking thorough measures such as improving health services, expanding disease prevention and control (vaccination, minimizing inappropriate antibiotic use), and improving access to antibiotics (developing new antibiotics), an estimated 92 million lives could be saved between 2025 and 2050. “The results‍ of the Global Antimicrobial Resistance (GRAM) project represent the first global ⁤analysis of ⁤trends in antimicrobial resistance (AMR) over​ time,” said Dr. Naghavi. “Antibiotics are one of the cornerstones of⁢ modern medicine.‌ However, concerns about the⁣ increase in ‘antibiotic ⁢resistance,’ where ⁢antibiotics are no longer effective, have emerged as​ a major ‍threat,” he added.

The first GRAM study, published in 2022, found that AMR-related deaths worldwide (in 2019) were ​greater than those caused by HIV/AIDS and​ malaria. In 2019, approximately 1.2 million people died directly due to antibiotic resistance, and approximately 4.95 million died indirectly.

The research team analyzed 22 pathogens, 84 pathogen-drug combinations, and 11 infectious syndromes (meningitis, bloodstream infections, etc.) ⁣across people of all ages from 204 countries and regions. The estimates were based on 520 million⁣ individual ⁣records from various sources, ‌including hospital records, death records, and ⁣antibiotic use data. “With the rapid aging of ⁢the population, we are concerned ⁣that AMR ⁣will pose a greater threat to older people,” said study co-author Kevin Ikuta, an associate professor of‌ infectious disease at the University of California, Los‌ Angeles.

Currently, the most serious antibiotic-resistant bacteria (bacteria) include gram-negative bacteria, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ⁣(MRSA), etc. Regions with the most serious ​antibiotic resistance problems include South Asia,‌ sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, East Asia, and parts ⁤of Oceania. The results of ​this study (Global burden of bacterial ​antimicrobial resistance 1990–2021: a ‍systematic analysis with forecasts to 2050) were published in the international​ academic journal The ‌Lancet.

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