G20
health ministers seek to avert return to "pre-penicillin
era"
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[May 18, 2017] BERLIN
(Reuters) - The world risks a return to the pre-penicillin era if
leading nations do not cooperate to combat the threat from
antibiotic-resistant bugs and means are not found to finance research
into new, more effective medicine, Germany's health minister said.
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Speaking ahead of Friday's first meeting of health ministers from
the Group of 20 leading developed and developing economies, Hermann
Groehe said more collaboration was needed to minimize the risk posed
by possible pandemics.
"There must be no return to the pre-penicillin era," he told Reuters
in an interview authorized for publication on Thursday.
"It would be a dramatic development if such an important weapon
against dangerous pathogens were taken from us ... (It would mean)
that we could lose a weapon against even minor infectious diseases,"
Groehe said.
Antibiotics such as penicillin are among the greatest medical
advances of human history, rendering curable countless bacterial
infections that had always previously amounted to a death sentence.
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But decades of over-prescription, for example to speed growth in
animal husbandry or to treat human illnesses for which antibiotics
have no effect, have led to the evolution of resistant strains of
many bacteria.
A European Union report last year found that newly resistant strains
of bacteria were responsible for more than 25,000 deaths a year in
the 28-nation EU alone.
Groehe said ways to foster research could include patent terms to
reward pharmaceuticals companies that developed new antibiotics and
also various forms of public-private partnership in which companies
would be paid a premium for new antibiotics.
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The mere fact of having the discussion would help raise public
awareness of the challenge, he added.
"We need more education in all health professions, looking at the
use of antibiotics and enlightened patients who don't nag the doctor
to prescribe them antibiotics even in cases where they wouldn't even
help," he said.
Groehe also wanted to see the G-20 countries playing a leadership
role in their respective regions, with the promise of help in
combating epidemics serving to encourage more openness about health
crises.
"It's important that countries facing a cross-border health threat
request help quickly, and that time isn't lost out of fear that
travel contacts will be cut off," he said.
Among the options he favored was a World Bank-proposed model of
insurance that countries facing an epidemic could draw on.
The G20 health ministers meet in Berlin on May 19-20.
(Reporting By Thomas Escritt; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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