Tomorrow, Thursday, is World Health Day, an annual observance that the World Health Organization uses to focus attention on some critical global-health issue. This year, they’ve chosen antimicrobial resistance as the issue that most needs highlighting. Noting the choice, the Lancet editorialized: “Resistance has joined the front rank of global health concerns.”
On the day, the WHO and some other agencies and organizations will be announcing plans and strategies. I’ll cover those tomorrow. For today, a scene-setter: Why you should care.
Having spent the last couple of years immersed in antibiotic resistance (because, you know, I wrote a book about it), I’m often puzzled why it doesn’t excite more alarm. I’ve concluded our situation is similar to the overused analogy of the frog in the slowly warming water: We don’t realize how bad things have gotten, even when we’re in imminent danger of death.
So here’s a round-up to remind us, drawn just from recent news.
In hospitals: Very large hospital systems are using more broad-spectrum last-resort drugs. Last weekend, representatives of the Veterans Health Administration disclosed that over 5 years, vancomycin use has gone up 79 percent, and carbapenem use, 102 percent. Vancomycin is the only affordable drug of last resort for MRSA; carbapenems are the drugs of last resort for gram-negative infections such as Klebsiella. The use of those drugs is growing because organisms are becoming multi-resistant to less-powerful drugs, but they are becoming resistant to the big guns too. Carbapenem resistance in Acinetobacter, a bacterium that afflicts ICU patients and gravely wounded military members, rose from 5 percent of isolates in US hospitals in 2000 to 40 percent in 2009. Israeli scientists reported this month that carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP, subject of my Scientific American article this month) caused a nationwide outbreak in 2007 and 2008, sickening 1,275 patients in 27 hospitals before it was brought under control. [Read more…]