Having just
finished a course of antibiotics prescribed by the dentist for something nasty
in the mouth the current story about the impending apocalypse that could occur
if “something isn’t done” about antibiotic resistance was of interest.
Because I
remember a time before antibiotics and recall those who died too soon, others
with damaged lives and many who suffered from a wide variety of causes and
infections the thought that this form of medication might soon be either no
longer available or effective is frightening.
This time
round the blame seems to lie squarely with humanity rather than any
geophysical, extra terrestrial or metaphysical cause. The difficulty is what kind of blame, where,
on whom and what can be done about it.
As ever, it
is very complicated with several strands of argument and not easy to be
absolute. The trouble is that we humans
are wedded to a model of single effect from a single cause with single action
needed to put things right.
One case is
that because it has always been understood by scientists that the battle
against infections is part of a never ending war of attrition then substantial
research, investment and effective action need to be continuing. If ground is conceded to the bugs they soon
might gain the upper hand.
However,
the structure and organisation of the relevant pharmaceuticals industries of
the world have changed down the decades.
It is argued that we have fewer big companies with more complicated
organisations operating to essentially financial targets.
As antibiotics
are no longer the big profit items but much more lower level products with
relatively limited earnings on investment they are no longer a priority. Firms are now more content to jog along with
old products and formulae for the foreseeable future.
So neither
the research is being done nor the long term investment being made. Also, governments have not been forthcoming
to encourage them. In the UK
science research is now heavily dependent on either a small number of companies
or funding from government targeted at the high profit and prestige items.
Antibiotics
are so yesterday in our go go world of money and politics. But this is not the whole story. It is argued that because of our own misuse
of existing antibiotics for a range of reasons we have significantly increased
the risk of accelerating the resistance to antibiotics in humans.
Family
doctors and ordinary health workers have been much too free handing them out in
quantity when neither needed nor appropriate.
For personal hygiene we have become careless of basics, even in
hospitals, relying on drugs and other heavy duty chemicals to do the job
instead.
The result
is that the antibiotics which are used can be disrupted by a lot of the other
stuff and again used wrongly. This is the
way resistance to the old basic antibiotics builds up and increases the need
for extra research and work for new formulae.
Also, we
have been shovelling antibiotics large scale into the production of basic foods
in livestock and poultry. These are part
of our food chain that means that when we go to the supermarket looking for
cheap food offers were are giving ourselves another dose of antibiotics into
the bargain. Horsemeat in the burgers
may be the least of our problems.
It might
have been possible to explain what it was like growing up in a world without
antibiotics to deal with infections and the rest but this blog does not go in
for horror stories.
Be afraid,
be very afraid.
I share your concern. It's one of the reasons I go on about climate change, because it horrifies me that we could spend so much on an imaginary problem when there are so many real ones.
ReplyDeleteIt's madness - but there's no cure for that.