Sunday, March 18, 2012

Health chief warns: age of safe medicine is ending


The fin of a lemon shark rises above the water's surface at sunset.
A lemon shark cruises near the Bahamas (file photo).
Photograph by Brian J. Skerry, National Geographic. Sharks carry drug resistant bacteria. photo

Antibiotic crisis will make routine operations impossible and a scratched knee could be fatal, by Jeremy Laurance


The world is entering an era where injuries as common as a child's scratched knee could kill, where patients entering hospital gamble with their lives and where routine operations such as a hip replacement become too dangerous to carry out, the head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned.

There is a global crisis in antibiotics caused by rapidly evolving resistance among microbes responsible for common infections that threaten to turn them into untreatable diseases, said Margaret Chan, director general of the WHO.
Addressing a meeting of infectious disease experts in Copenhagen, she said that every antibiotic ever developed was at risk of becoming useless.
"A post-antibiotic era means, in effect, an end to modern medicine as we know it. Things as common as strep throat or a child's scratched knee could once again kill."...Continue reading...

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