Issuing its first comprehensive report into the growing health
threat in six years, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention said it had determined that 2.8 million antibiotic
resistant infections occur each year, killing 35,000 people.
A 2013 CDC study estimated that 2 million Americans were infected by
superbugs each year, leading to at least 23,000 deaths."The 2013
report propelled the nation toward critical action and investments
against antibiotic resistance. Today's report demonstrates notable
progress, yet the threat is still real," Dr. Robert Redfield, the
CDC's director, said in a statement.
Global health officials have repeatedly warned about the rise of
bacteria and other microbes that are resistant to most available
drugs, raising the specter of untreatable infectious diseases that
could spread rapidly.
Drug resistance is driven by the misuse and overuse of antibiotics
and other antimicrobials, which encourages bacteria to evolve to
survive by finding new ways to beat the medicines.
The CDC said that 2019's higher numbers were the result of new and
better data sources, not a rise in fatalities, and that in fact
prevention efforts had decreased deaths from the hard-to-kill germs
by 18%.
A spokeswoman for the nonprofit National Resources Defense Council,
however, called even the CDC's new estimate far too low, saying that
a recent Washington University study put the death toll at more than
160,000.
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"There is no doubt that drug-resistant infections are on the rise.
While CDC's estimates have improved, they remain conservative," said
Avinash Kar, a senior NRDC attorney.
"Solving antibiotic resistance will require ending the rampant
overuse of these drugs in livestock. Until then, these lifesaving
drugs will increasingly fail when sick people need them—and, as CDC
recognized, 'everyone is at risk,'" Kar said.
The NRDC said nearly two-thirds of antibiotics important for human
medicine are sold for use in livestock, distributed en masse in feed
or water, often to animals that are not sick.
The CDC said the antibiotic resistance "threat list" now contained
18 germs, including two more that were considered urgent:
drug-resistant Candida auris and carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter.
Three urgent threats were identified in the 2013 report: carbapenem-resistant
Enterobacteriaceae or CRE, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Clostridioides
difficile.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Culver City, California; Editing by
Richard Chang)
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