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Overcoming Antimicrobial Resistance - Preface http://www.who.int/infectious-disease-report/2000/preface.

htm

Preface

We are the first generation ever to have the means of protecting itself from
the most deadly and common infectious diseases. Today, we possess the
knowledge to prevent or cure diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV,
diarrhoeal diseases, pneumonia and measles.

Smallpox eradication and a reduction of deaths due to measles has been


made possible by the introduction of widespread immunization
campaigns. And while there are still no effective vaccines to prevent
infection from other leading killers (tuberculosis, malaria, HIV,
diarrhoeal diseases and pneumonia), control and containment using
existing interventions is well within our reach. Within the past two
decades, the scientific community has developed successful strategies and
products to counter threats posed by infectious diseases in both wealthy
and poorer nations.

In all countries, these diseases can be prevented or treated with tools and
medicines that usually cost a few dollars – often mere cents. Because of
advances in the use of anti-malarials and insecticide-treated bednets, malaria deaths are no longer common in Viet Nam. Mexico has
achieved a five-fold reduction in diarrhoeal deaths through the use of oral rehydration. Increased condom use and health education
have enabled Thailand and Uganda to reduce the spread of HIV. The effective use of antibiotics in parts of India has resulted in a
seven-fold decrease in tuberculosis deaths.

Previous generations once prayed for these life-saving drugs, interventions and control strategies. But now that they are available, the
world has been slow to put them to wide use. In disease endemic countries, global efforts have remained embarassingly modest. Only
3% of Africa's children have bednets. Effective anti-TB medicines and treatment strategies reach only 25% of the world's TB cases
and only half of developing countries have adopted the effective Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses (IMCI) package.

The underuse and misuse of recent health breakthroughs has been catastrophic for people living and working in developing countries.
Two out of every three deaths among young people in the poorest countries of Africa and Asia continue to result from just a handful of
illnesses. Each year worldwide, more than 11 million people die from these preventable or curable afflictions. Most deaths are
among young parents and children.

The Threat of Antimicrobial Resistance is Growing

We are now beginning to pay for our neglect – a price over and above the
tragedy and suffering infectious diseases inflict on millions of people
annually. Our failure to make full use of recently discovered medicines
and products means that many will slip through our grasp.

This is evident in wealthy countries which have exclusively focussed


efforts on fighting disease within their own borders, while failing to help
eliminate them globally. Proliferating elsewhere, many bacteria, viruses
and parasites mutate, become drug resistant and venture back to wealthy
countries via modern transportation.

Resistance is also seen where health workers have exclusively focussed


on providing drugs for their patients while inadvertently failing to take
time to ensure proper diagnosis, prescription and adherence to treatment.

Antimicrobial resistance is a natural biological phenomenon. But it


becomes a significant public health problem where it is amplified
many-fold owing to human misuse and neglect. Drug resistance is the
most telling sign that we have failed to take the threat of infectious

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Overcoming Antimicrobial Resistance - Preface http://www.who.int/infectious-disease-report/2000/preface.htm

diseases seriously. It suggests that we have mishandled our precious


arsenal of disease-fighting drugs, both by overusing them in developed
nations and, paradoxically, both misusing and underusing them in
developing nations. In all cases, half-hearted use of powerful antibiotics
now will eventually result in less effective drugs later.

This report describes the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance. It documents how once life-saving medicines are increasingly
having as little effect as a sugar pill. Microbial resistance to treatment could bring the world back to a pre-antibiotic age.

The Window of Opportunity is Closing

Before long, we may have forever missed our opportunity to control and
eventually eliminate the most dangerous infectious diseases. Indeed, if we
fail to make rapid progress during this decade, it may become very
difficult and expensive – if not impossible – to do so later. We need to
make effective use of the tools we have now.

The eradication of smallpox in 1980, for example, happened not a moment


too soon. Just a few years' delay and the unforeseen emergence of HIV
would have undermined safe smallpox vaccination in populations
severely affected by HIV.

While many exciting research efforts are currently underway, there is no


guarantee that they will yield new drugs or vaccines in the near future.
Since 1970, no new classes of antibacterials have been developed to
combat infectious diseases. On average, research and development of
anti-infective drugs takes 10 to 20 years. Currently, there are no new
drugs or vaccines ready to emerge from the research and development
pipeline.

Moreover, for the major infectious killers, research and development


funding continues to be woefully inadequate. A very small percentage of
all global health research and development funding is currently devoted to
finding new drugs or vaccines to stop AIDS, acute respiratory infections
(ARI), diarrhoeal diseases, malaria and TB. The pharmaceutical industry
reports that it costs them a minimum of US$ 500 million just to bring one drug to market. Combined funding for research and
development into ARI, diarrhoeal diseases, malaria and TB last year was under that amount.

A Massive Effort is Required

Although prevention through vaccination continues to be the


ultimate weapon against infection and drug resistance, no vaccines
are available to prevent five of the six major infectious killers.
Yet it is a needless tragedy that 11 million people perish each
year awaiting the advent of newer miracle drugs and vaccines.
Prevention and treatment strategies using tools available now can
be provided to populations throughout the world to help eliminate
high-burden diseases of poverty.

We need not stand by helplessly watching antimicrobial resistance


increase and drug effectiveness decrease. As this report shows,
resistance can be contained. When an infection is addressed in a
comprehensive and timely manner, resistance rarely becomes a
public health problem. The most effective strategy against antimicrobial resistance is to get the job done right the first time – to
unequivocally destroy microbes – thereby defeating resistance before it starts.

Today - despite advances in science and technology - infectious disease poses a more deadly threat to human life than war. This year

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Overcoming Antimicrobial Resistance - Preface http://www.who.int/infectious-disease-report/2000/preface.htm

– at the onset of a new millennium – the international community is beginning to show its intent to turn back these microbial invaders
through massive efforts against diseases of poverty – diseases which must be defeated now, before they become resistant. When
diseases are fought wisely and widely, drug resistance can be controlled and lives saved.

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