Superbugs
England's Chief Medical Officer says superbugs that cannot be treated by antibiotics are as big a threat as terrorism. Allan Urry asks if the NHS is able to cope.
In the first of a new series, File on 4 asks whether recent stark warnings about the threat posed by growing resistance to antibiotics have come too late.
The Chief Medical Officer of England, Professor Dame Sally Davies, has painted an apocalyptic picture where routine operations could become deadly in just 20 years if we lose the ability to fight infection.
But the programme discovers growing concern among doctors that bugs found in our hospitals have already developed the ability to withstand drugs which are effectively the last line of defence.
Has the Government drive to eradicate MRSA and C-Difficile left the back door open for more challenging strains of superbug to take hold? Does the health service know why numbers of healthcare infections of E. Coli are rising? And where are the new medicines to tackle the resistant strains? The programme hears there's little incentive for drug companies to produce new antibiotics because they won't be able to make enough money.
Allan Urry meets the medics on the front line in the battle to stop infection killing patients. Can the NHS win the war against the microbes?
Producer: Paul Grant.
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Infectious diseases consultant: 'We don't know what to do next'
Duration: 01:05
READ THE PROGRAMME TRANSCRIPT
England's Chief Medical Officer says superbugs which can't be treated by antibiotics are as big a threat as terrorism. Allan Urry asks if the NHS is able to cope.
Views from the frontline
File on 4 contacted the British Infection Association which asked its members how many patients they had seen with antibiotic-resistant infections in the last 12 months.
90ΜύofΜύits members – who include infectious disease doctors and microbiologists - replied.
On average, they said they saw six patients with resistance to all antibiotics and around ninety with multi-resistant strains.Μύ
Here are some of the thoughts of those who replied:
Μύ
- "Routine chemotherapy and surgery will be riskier in 10 years due to risk of multi drug resistant gram negative bacteria. This is undeniable in my opinion."
- "I have seen patients on transplant lists found to have bacteria with confirmed resistance to ALL antibiotics. What do we do with them?"
- "I have noticed increased mortality among patients coming into hospital with sepsis due to rising antibiotic resistance."
- "There are not enough resources in terms of infection pharmacists and isolation facilities to cope…. the underfunded Infection services are fighting a losing battle."
- "I would equate this pandemic to the "plague of the 21st century as in the pre-antibiotic era!"
Broadcasts
- Tue 21 May 2013 20:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Sun 26 May 2013 17:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 FM
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