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Russia rains missiles on Ukraine after Trump names new envoy to conflict; Indiana-built, American-made sound rocks the world; Calls to LGBTQ+ helpline surge following Election Day; Watchdogs: NYS needs more robust ethics commission.

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The Democratic Party is regrouping, but critiques continue. The incoming Trump administration looks at barring mainstream media from White House briefings, and AIDS advocates say the pick of Robert F. Kennedy Junior for DHHS is worrying.

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Residents in Colorado's rural communities face challenges to recycling, climate change and Oregon's megadrought are worrying firefighters, and a farm advocacy group says corporate greed is behind high food prices in Montana.

Experts say 'superbugs' are making antibiotic drugs less effective

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Wednesday, November 13, 2024   

Medical researchers said germs are getting smarter and more are becoming resistant to a class of drugs designed to treat infections.

Doctors say the overprescribing of antibiotics to fight illness has turned some of those pathogens into so-called "superbugs," which cause infections that can be difficult or impossible to cure.

Dr. Alice Kim, president and CEO of ID Care, a New Jersey-based infectious disease practice, said a decade ago, there was a wide array of effective drugs but in recent years, things have changed.

"We're at risk right now because those common pathogens are growing resistant," Kim explained. "We really don't have a lot within our armatarium now to use because it's not only full resistance, it's gaining resistance and partial resistance that also contributes to the problem."

A recent report from the World Health Organization said antibiotic resistance is rendering the current supply of drugs to fight deadly pathogens inadequate. A bill pending in Congress, the PASTEUR Act, if passed, would allocate $6 billion to fund new research into critical antimicrobials.

Doctors said some patients pressure them to prescribe antibiotics when an illness may be caused by a viral or other type of infection, leading to overuse of antimicrobials.

David Hyun, director of the Antibiotic Resistance Project at the Pew Charitable Trusts, said research shows at least one in three antibiotics are prescribed unnecessarily.

"These bacteria are continuously learning through exposure to find defenses and evasion mechanisms to survive antibiotic treatment," Hyun pointed out. "Once that happens, then that antibiotic becomes obsolete, no longer effective against a given infection."

Kim stressed the medical industry needs to do more to find solutions to the problem of antibiotic resistance.

"It's important for us to have these antibiotics to help them be successful and increase quality of life," Kim noted. "But we have to be very, very careful on how we use antibiotics because it's a good and a bad thing."

Support for this reporting was provided by The Pew Charitable Trusts.

Disclosure: The Pew Charitable Trusts Environmental Group contributes to our fund for reporting on Endangered Species and Wildlife, Environment, and Public Lands/Wilderness. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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