For any budding student slightly interested in medicine,
science and any interested in current affairs the antibiotic resistance crisis
would no doubt have found its way into your thought process at some point. I
know it is often on my mind.
The crisis of antibiotic resistance is one that is often
documented in the media, and it is in my opinion one of the biggest challenges
that modern medicine faces. In 2013
alone, there were about 480 000 new cases of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis
according to WHO, this to me is slightly terrifying as without antibiotics we
return to the pre antibiotic era, where whether you survived tuberculosis or
not was down to sheer luck.
It’s a
situation where I am not sure what the answer is, and I don’t expect to know
the answer quite frankly, I’m not sure anyone really does. There is of course
things we can do as a society to prevent the situation escalating more than it
already has, by not overprescribing or overusing antibiotics, having a general
understanding of antibiotics and antibiotic resistant. However, I personally
fear that it is a situation where antibiotic resistance will occur regardless
of our efforts to prevent it, in fact thanks to Darwin and the theory of
evolution we know this to be true. The selection pressure that is antibiotics
will naturally cause bacteria to evolve to become resistant to them.
So what
is the solution?
To me,
with what many may call naïve optimism, due to my age, I would say let’s find
an alternative to antibiotics. If you ask me what that is, I will tell you this;
at the moment I do not know. Yet, I do have ideas and one of them is thanks to
my EPQ project, it is called phage therapy, and I will not delve into the
technicalities of it at this moment, for I want to keep my posts as short and
snappy as possible, but I will say if you are intrigued or rightfully concerned
by this global crisis, I say do a bit of research. Phage therapy is highly under
researched and doesn’t have the best reputation due to past research and
trials, but it is if anything a fascinating idea, and even if it isn’t a possible
solution to this crisis it’s worth a look up either way.
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