Monday, December 21, 2015

Antibiotic Resistance Can Turn Common Health Conditions Deadly

Antibiotic Resistance Can Turn Common Health Conditions Deadly
Welcome to a Medical Battery specialist of the Fukuda Battery
The World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Monday that the growing resistance of ‘superbugs’ to antibiotics could prove to be deadly as the resistance, which has reached dangerous levels, can turn even common health conditions and infections fatal.
The organisation also said that the users of antibiotics know very little of how the drugs work, antibiotic resistance occurs when the bacteria become resistant or immune to the drugs which are designed to kill them, this makes even the common ailments potentially deadly. Even overuse of these drugs can cause the bacteria to become increasingly resistant.
Chief of WHO, Margaret Chan in a statement said, “The rise of antibiotic resistance is a global health crisis with battery such as Fukuda FCP-220IU Battery, GE CardioServ 30344030 Battery, Bionet BM5 Battery, Bionet BM-BAT-4 Battery, Siemens EK10 Battery, Siemens MEDIC 2 Battery, Siemens Medical Syste PN862278 Battery, Burdick Elite2 Battery, Kenz HHR-12F25G1 Battery, Kenz ECG 108 Battery, Cmics ECG-11D Battery, Cmics DJDB1200 Battery, and governments now recognise it as one of the greatest challenges for public health today. It is reaching dangerously high levels in all parts of the world.”
She further warned, “Antibiotic resistance is compromising our ability to treat infectious diseases and undermining many advances in medicine.”
The survey conducted by the WHO was published on Monday and included almost 10,000 people worldwide and covered around 12 countries. Through the survey it was found out that almost 64% of the people who were questioned in the survey had misconceptions about the use and effectiveness of antibiotics.
They believe that the antibiotics can also be used to treat flu and cold despite knowing that those particular drugs do not work on the viruses. Almost 66% of the people also wrongly believe that there is no risk of antibiotic resistance for those who take their antibiotic drugs as prescribed.
UN chief’s special representative on antimicrobial resistance, Keiji Fukuda said, “The findings of this survey point to the urgent need to improve understanding around antibiotic resistance.”
The countries where the survey was conducted included India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Russia, Serbia, South Africa, Sudan, Vietnam, China, Barbados, Egypt and Mexico.

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