People across the world
are confused about the major threat to public health posed by drug-resistant
superbugs and do not know how to stop that risk growing, the World Health
Organization (WHO) said on Monday. Ramping up its fight against antibiotic
resistance with a survey of public awareness, the United Nations health agency
said 64 percent of those asked believed wrongly that penicillin-based drugs and
other antibiotics can treat colds and flu, despite the fact such medicines have
no impact on viruses.
Around
a third of people surveyed also wrongly believed they should stop taking
antibiotics when they feel better, rather than completing the prescribed
treatment course, the WHO said.
Reuters report continues:
"The
findings ... point to the urgent need to improve understanding around
antibiotic resistance," said Keiji Fukuda, the WHO's special
representative for antimicrobial resistance.
"One
of the biggest health challenges of the 21st century will require global
behaviour change by individuals and societies."
Antibiotic
resistance happens when bacteria mutate and adapt to become resistant to the
antibiotics used to treat the infections they cause. Over-use and misuse of
antibiotics exacerbate the development of drug resistant bacteria, often called
superbugs.
Superbug
infections -- including multi-drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis, typhoid and
gonorrhoea -- kill hundreds of thousands of people a year, and the trend is
growing.
"The
rise of antibiotic resistance is a global health crisis," the WHO's director-general
Margaret Chan said in a statement. "It is reaching dangerously high levels
in all parts of the world."
The
WHO surveyed 10,000 people across 12 countries -- Barbados, China, Egypt,
India, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria, Russia, Serbia, South Africa, Sudan and
Vietnam -- and found many worrying misconceptions.
Three
quarters of respondents think antibiotic resistance means the body is resistant
to the drugs, for example, whereas in fact it is the bacteria themselves that
become resistant to antibiotics and their spread causes hard-to-treat
infections.
Some
66 percent believe individuals are not at risk of a drug-resistant infection if
they personally take their antibiotics as prescribed.
And nearly half of those
surveyed think drug resistance is only a problem in people who take antibiotics
often. In fact, anyone, anywhere, of any age, can get a superbug infection.
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