CIE AS Biology

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First teaching 2020

Last exams 2024

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10.2.3 Consequences of Antibiotic Resistance

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Consequences of Antibiotic Resistance

Consequences of antibiotic resistance

  • Commonly prescribed antibiotics are becoming less effective for many reasons, the main being:
    • Overuse of antibiotics and antibiotics being prescribed when not necessary
    • Large scale use of antibiotics in farming to prevent disease when livestock are kept in close quarters, even when animals are not sick
    • Patients failing to complete the full course of antibiotics prescribed by doctors

  • These factors have led to a reduction in the effectiveness of antibiotics, and an increase in the incidence of antibiotic resistance
  • These bacteria are commonly known as superbugs
  • The most common example is a strain of Staphylococcus aureus that has developed resistance to a powerful antibiotic methicillin and is now known as MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) as well as other antibiotics (eg. penicillin)
  • Bacteria living where there is a widespread use of many different antibiotics may have plasmids containing resistance genes for several different antibiotics, giving them multiple resistance and presenting a significant problem for doctors
  • In addition, resistance may first appear in a non-pathogenic bacterium, but then be passed on to a pathogenic species by horizontal transmission
  • There is a constant race to find new antibiotics as resistant strains are continuously evolving

Reducing antibiotic resistance & its impact

  • Ways to prevent the incidence of antibiotic resistance increasing include:
    • Tighter controls in countries in which antibiotics are sold without a doctor’s prescription
    • Doctors avoiding the overuse of antibiotics, prescribing them only when needed (patients must only be given antibiotics when absolutely essential) – doctors should test the bacteria first to make sure that they prescribe the correct antibiotic
    • Antibiotics not being used in non-serious infections that the immune system will ‘clear up’ (patients must not keep unused antibiotics for self-medication of such non-serious infections in the future)
    • When prescribed a course of antibiotics, the patient finishing the entire course (even if they feel better after a few days) so that all the bacteria are killed, and none are left to mutate to become resistant strains
    • Antibiotics not being used for viral infections (antibiotics have no effect on viruses anyway, and this just provides an unnecessary chance for bacteria to develop resistance)
    • The use of ‘wide-spectrum’ antibiotics being reduced and instead those antibiotics that are highly specific to the infection (‘narrow-spectrum’ antibiotics) being used
    • The type of antibiotics prescribed being changed so that the same antibiotic is not always prescribed for the same infections and diseases (this reduces the chance of a resistant strain developing)
    • The use of antibiotics being reduced and more tightly controlled in industries such as agriculture – controls are now in place to limit their use in farming, where antibiotics are used to prevent, rather than cure, bacterial infections

  • The spread of already-resistant strains can be limited by:
    • Ensuring good hygiene practices such as handwashing and the use of hand sanitisers (this has reduced the rates of resistant strains of bacteria, such as MRSA, in hospitals)
    • Isolating infected patients to prevent the spread of resistant strains, in particular in surgical wards where MRSA can infect surgical wounds

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Lára

Author: Lára

Lára graduated from Oxford University in Biological Sciences and has now been a science tutor working in the UK for several years. Lára has a particular interest in the area of infectious disease and epidemiology, and enjoys creating original educational materials that develop confidence and facilitate learning.