© Suzanne
Plunkett / Reuters
|
The impending failure of
antibiotics to treat life-threatening diseases could cause a social and
economic “apocalypse” in Britain and throughout the first world, scientists
warn. Medical
experts predict many dangerous diseases will become completely resistant to
antibiotics in the near future, causing social unrest on an unprecedented
level.
The
crisis could result in people barricading themselves into enclaves as the health
system collapses under the strain of chronic diseases, scientist Adam Roberts
told the British Science Festival last week.
The
senior lecturer in microbial disease at University College London warned the
failure of antibiotics could result in wars and civil unrest and people fight
over medical treatments.
RT report continues:
A
briefing paper prepared for the government and Wellcome Trust warns that huge
advances against diseases made possible since the discovery of penicillin could
be temporary.
“Resistance
to antibiotics has now become a major concern because doctors are left with
fewer effective treatments for serious and life-threatening infections,” the
authors write.
“It
is becoming clear that the success of conventional antibiotics may have only
been temporary and we now anticipate a long-term, generational challenge to
find new therapies as fast as bacteria become resistant to them. Worse, the
search for new conventional antibiotics has become far less productive.”
The
paper states that £250 million (US$388 million) will be made available for 10
new classes of “alternatives to antibiotics.”
Scientist
Mike Turner said antibody-based treatments for drug-resistant lung infections
could reach the NHS within seven years.
“Yes,
there’s an apocalyptic scenario out there,” the head of Infection and
Immunology at the Wellcome Trust said.
“I
don’t expect it to come to pass, but only if we actually get agreement on
making things change now.”
A
report published on Thursday by the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics
& Policy (CDDEP) in Washington DC and New Delhi demonstrates the global
scale of the problem.
‘The
State of the World’s Antibiotics 2015’ paper found a growing resistance to
antibiotics from diseases such as E. coli and the highly dangerous pathogen
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
The
report states that limiting the overuse and misuse of antibiotics is the only
sustainable solution.
“We
need to focus 80 percent of our global resources on stewardship and no more
than 20 percent on drug development,” said report co-author and CDDEP Director
Ramanan Laxminarayan.
“No matter how many new
drugs come out, if we continue to misuse them, they might as well have never
been discovered.”
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