un warns of drugresistant germ risk brewing in nature
Last Updated : GMT 09:40:38
Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle
Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle
Last Updated : GMT 09:40:38
Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle

In the natural environment

UN warns of drug-resistant germ risk brewing in nature

Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle

Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicleUN warns of drug-resistant germ risk brewing in nature

The UN warned Tuesday of a ticking time bomb of drug-resistant germs
NAIROBI - Muslimchronicle

The UN warned Tuesday of a ticking time bomb of drug-resistant germs brewing in the natural environment, aided by humans dumping antibiotics and chemicals into the water and soil.
If this continues, people will be at an ever-higher risk of contracting diseases which are incurable by existing antibiotics from swimming in the sea or other seemingly innocuous activities, a report said.
“Around the world, discharge from municipal, agricultural and industrial waste in the environment means it is common to find antibiotic concentrations in many rivers, sediments and soils,” the study found.
“It is steadily driving the evolution of resistant bacteria,” it said. “A drug that once protected our health is now in danger of very quietly destroying it.”
The report, “Frontiers 2017,” was released at the UN Environment Assembly, the highest-level gathering on matters concerning the environment.
Health watchdogs are already deeply worried about the dwindling armory of weapons against germs.
A report in 2014 warned that drug-resistant infections might kill 10 million people a year by 2050, making it the leading cause of death, over heart disease and cancer.
Bacteria acquire drug resistance partly by exposure to antibiotics.
To survive the drug onslaught, bacteria can transfer, even between different species, genes that confer immunity. They can pass these genes on to future generations, or DNA can mutate spontaneously.
Strong enough doses of antibiotics will kill disease-causing bacteria before they have a chance to mutate.
But antibiotics are generally overprescribed, often at incorrect doses, which means the germs are not killed but instead given an evolutionary boost to survive future exposure to the same drug.
“We may enter what people are calling a post-antibiotic era, so we go back to the pre-1940s when simple infection... will become very difficulty, if not impossible” to treat, Will Gaze of the University of Exeter, who co-authored the new report, told AFP.
The investigation highlighted a largely unknown and poorly researched contributor to the drug-resistance problem: environmental pollution.
Today, 70 percent to 80 percent of all antibiotics that humans take, or give to farm animals to bulk them up and keep them healthy, find their way into the environment, partly through wastewater and manure deposits.
“So the majority of those hundreds of thousands of tons of antibiotics produced every year end up in the environment,” Gaze said.
Humans and animals also excrete germs, both resistant and non-resistant, into water and the soil, where they mingle with the antibiotic detritus and naturally occurring bacteria.
Add to this mix antibacterial products such as disinfectants and heavy metals that are toxic to germs, and ideal conditions are created for bacteria to develop drug-resistance in places where humans will come in contact with them.
“If we go into river systems, we see really big increases in resistance downstream (from) wastewater treatment plants... and associated with certain types of land use, so grazing land for example,” Gaze said.
“If you go into coastal waters where... you might be heavily exposed to the environment, we know that we can measure quite high numbers of resistant bacteria in there.”
One study showed that people were exposed to a drug-resistant E.coli bacteria in recreational waters off the British coast, despite “high levels of investment” in the treatment of wastewater.
In much of the effluent, drug concentrations are too low to kill bacteria, but “may be sufficient to induce antimicrobial resistance,” the report said.
Delegates urged more research into the newly exposed origin of drug-immune germs.
“Antimicrobial resistance is an issue that has long been on the agenda... it is indeed one of the biggest threats to health,” Norway’s environment minister Vidar Helgesen said.
“When we see emerging evidence that tackling pollution is key to solving the antimicrobial resistance crisis, we need to invest more in getting more knowledge about that.”
Gaze agreed that more research was needed to quantify the risk.
“There’s no single smoking-gun study that says: ‘This is the amount of infection caused by the environment’. But if you start piecing it together, it looks like it’s significant,” he said.
“It’s like smoking: It took 50 years for the actual causal evidence to emerge after everyone knew that it was bad for your health.”

 

themuslimchronicle
themuslimchronicle

Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

un warns of drugresistant germ risk brewing in nature un warns of drugresistant germ risk brewing in nature

 



Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle

GMT 20:10 2017 Saturday ,09 September

Qatar News Agency continues to distort facts

GMT 01:33 2017 Sunday ,12 February

MBRSC and AUS announce launch of Nayif

GMT 16:44 2017 Wednesday ,11 October

New military op in gang-plagued Rio favela

GMT 07:42 2017 Sunday ,03 September

Venezuela probes wife of opposition activist

GMT 00:44 2017 Sunday ,19 March

Federal Prosecution for cybercrimes established

GMT 20:54 2017 Thursday ,20 April

Dollar exchange rate stable at major banks in Egypt

GMT 19:11 2017 Sunday ,29 October

US Fed to stand pat as inflation conundrum persists

GMT 14:30 2017 Tuesday ,04 July

Beaten Pacquiao to 'think hard' about retiring

GMT 13:58 2017 Tuesday ,19 September

Balance Festival appoints Hope & Glory PR

GMT 16:23 2015 Friday ,25 September

'Super blood moon' to give stargazers a rare show

GMT 13:22 2017 Wednesday ,30 August

Looking stylish and playing well always fashionable

GMT 08:53 2017 Wednesday ,22 November

Leaders of Russia, Iran, Turkey meet

GMT 20:29 2017 Thursday ,10 August

UAE offers further support to Aden Police

GMT 09:39 2017 Saturday ,16 December

T-Mobile unveils plans for US pay TV service

GMT 06:02 2017 Saturday ,16 December

Lawyer of Salvadoran woman jailed

GMT 12:17 2017 Saturday ,23 September

Russia keen on more OPEC cooperation on oil output cap

GMT 08:51 2017 Thursday ,22 June

Amina Khalil happy for reactions to her series

GMT 08:45 2017 Wednesday ,26 July

Injectable AIDS Drug May Work

GMT 08:34 2017 Monday ,24 July

Actress Nelly Karim denies clashes with Zeina

GMT 08:04 2017 Thursday ,07 December

Dalal Abdel Aziz happy for honoring husband
Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle
Themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle
 
 Themuslimchronicle Facebook,themuslimchronicle facebook  Themuslimchronicle Twitter,themuslimchronicle twitter Themuslimchronicle Rss,themuslimchronicle rss  Themuslimchronicle Youtube,themuslimchronicle youtube  Themuslimchronicle Youtube,themuslimchronicle youtube

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©

muslimchronicle muslimchronicle muslimchronicle muslimchronicle
themuslimchronicle themuslimchronicle themuslimchronicle
themuslimchronicle
بناية النخيل - رأس النبع _ خلف السفارة الفرنسية _بيروت - لبنان
themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle, themuslimchronicle