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Antimicrobial Resistance Killing More People Each Year Than HIV And Aids Or Malaria

2 years agoThu, 24 Feb 2022 06:59:31 GMT
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Antimicrobial Resistance Killing More People Each Year Than HIV And Aids Or Malaria

The Sixth Global Forum on Tuberculosis has warned that antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is killing more people each year than HIV and Aids or malaria.

The forum projected that by 2050, AMR would be the world’s leading health challenge.

This was said on Tuesday by virologist Philippe Sansonetti from the Institute Pasteur and College de France during the official opening of the forum.

She revealed that TB drug resistance accounts for nearly a third of the 3 500 daily deaths from AMR, making the development of a TB vaccine an essential strategy to reduce drug resistance. Sansonetti said:

We need vaccines because they protect against antibiotic resistance by reducing the burden of disease.

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Drug-resistant TB is a significant problem worldwide and is caused by incorrect use of TB medication.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) Zimbabwe office says there was growing evidence of AMR in the country.

A study by local epidemiologists following the 2018 cholera outbreak revealed that there had been a high incidence of drug resistance which made it difficult to contain the disease using the usual antibiotics.

The situation has been worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic which resulted in an upsurge in antimicrobial use.

Stakeholders at the Global TB vaccine meeting hosted by France called for public funding for TB vaccine research, which remains inadequate.

To date, the only licensed TB vaccine is BCG, which was discovered 100 years ago and only provides moderate protection against severe forms of TB in babies and young children, but does not stop TB transmission in teens and adults.

There are currently 15 TB vaccine candidates, including three in phase three trials and two others preparing for Phase 3 trials.

More: NewsDay Zimbabwe

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