Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine (ISCCM) strengthens awareness of the Fight Against AMR

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Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine (ISCCM) strengthens awareness of the Fight Against AMR (Antimicrobial Resistance).
Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine (ISCCM) strengthens awareness of the Fight Against AMR (Antimicrobial Resistance).
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Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine (ISCCM) strengthens awareness of the Fight Against AMR (Antimicrobial Resistance)

Kolkata, 2nd March 2024:

With an intent to raise awareness and educate people about the condition ‘Anti-microbial resistance’ and the public health problems related to it, the Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine (ISCCM) joined hands with the nation’s leading doctors to organise a conference to share their insights on the prevailing condition in India.

Antimicrobial resistance occurs when germs like bacteria and fungi develop the ability to defeat the drugs pinned to kill them, resulting in their growth. Resistant infections can be difficult, and sometimes impossible, to treat. One of the major reasons causing this is the inappropriate usage of antimicrobials, and sometimes inadequate diagnosis. It’s imperative for healthcare providers to prescribe antimicrobials appropriately, and not get overwhelmed with insistent patients. Additionally, understanding the increasing need to prevent hospital-acquired infections that lead to such conditions is paramount. Public Private Partnership (PPP) model in the healthcare industry can possibly check the incidence of this as it helps in ensuring that the medical infrastructure is leveraged at best through optimum utilization. Raising awareness among the public on the use and abuse of antibiotics can be the first step in bringing a sustainable change in behaviour. 

Calling attention to the global public health threat, that has directly killed nearly 3 lac people in India, including newborns in 2019 alone, leading doctors like Dr. S K Todi, Dr. Prakash Shastri, Dr. Subramanian Swaminathan, Dr. Sanjith Saseedharan, Dr. Dhruva Chaudhry, and Dr. Ajoy Sarkar broke the ice around the myth that antibiotics can treat everything without any side-effects.

Dr. S K Todi, Co-chairperson, of the Scientific Committee, Criticare, said “India has been on the frontline because of the increasing resistance to antibiotics. We are seeing patients coming from different communities with drug-resistant infections. Where previously few drugs like ampicillin used to work, but now they are not working. So, it’s a very grave concern that people are dying because of inappropriate usage of antibiotic dosage. And India is now looked at as the epicentre of this disease. Hence, we’ve gathered here, so we can convey this message to the audience that half of the infections are viral and do not require antibiotics. Unfortunately, we do not have a stringent regulation in our country to impede the dissemination of antibiotics without prescriptions, but the government is taking strict actions on this.”

Dr. Prakash Shastri, Critical Care Specialist, Sri Gangaram Hospital, Delhi stated “It’s because of the availability of these antibiotics in the counters in India, that the proper usage of these are not taken care of. For instance, I had a mother coming into my chamber with her son who had a fever, to whom I had just prescribed paracetamol. She was really not happy with my diagnosis and doubted my judgment. So, I think the patients are also very much willing to take medicines without even knowing what has happened to them. Recently it was published somewhere that the water supply of Delhi has very serious bacteria which do not respond to commonly used antibiotics, and since this new and novel resistance mechanism was found in Delhi, it was named as New Delhi mechanism. But it’s not okay to name such a serious disease and blame India as the originator of it just because it’s found here. So I think again the responsibility is everyone’s at the end of the day to gain knowledge on such severe conditions and not spread the word without knowing.”

Dr. Subramanian Swaminathan, Director, of Infectious Disease, Gleneagles Hospital, Chennai said, “None of us take cancer, cholesterol or BP medicine because we don’t feel nice, but we have a tendency to take antibiotics if we fall minorly ill. That is the starting point which is very dangerous. Our fear of falling severely ill somehow makes us feel that taking antibiotics for minor sickness will solve our issue, and not cause us any trouble, but it does. The key solution to such fears is knowledge. A record list states by 2050 drug-resistant bacteria are going to take down more people than cancer and it is going to be a catastrophe because of the cost.  These antibiotics are designed for a purpose, and we should respect that. The starting point is to understand if all these medications are going to cure us or if is it just to put a halt to our fear. It’s time people realise that antibiotics are not the answer to every problem. Unless and until it is required, patients should be content with not having these antibiotics. And without all stakeholders working that includes the government, physicians, pharmaceuticals and most importantly the society, this issue cannot be resolved.”

Dr. Sanjith Saseedharan, Head, of the Critical Care Department, SL Raheja Hospital, Mumbai said, “Antibiotics have now become an anti-anxiety medicine. We have observed that when some parents bring their child to an outpatient clinic for general paediatric treatment, they often ask why the doctor did not prescribe an antibiotic and that is a fearful incident. I strongly feel it’s time doctors should discuss with their patients the element of risk associated with antibiotic dosage. So, I remember this a while ago, there were no antibiotics and people were dying and now we have millions of antibiotics, though no people are dying but has occurred that we may not get any treatment left. We have gone back to a condition where even if someone falls somewhere or gets their knees scratched, they will probably require a very heavy dose of antibiotic and this is what is occurring as of now, and we would have nothing to save people as time goes on. After conducting a study in our hospital where we did culture of stool specimens of people who were coming for normal things like angiography, we found a large number of infectious resistance organisms in those stool samples which Todi sir was referring to. This is now a community problem, and we feel this is disastrous. So, in this hall, if there are 100 people, 30 of you have this mechanism which means if tomorrow your immunity goes down it is these bacteria which might cause the problem. Yes, we are moving from an anti-biotic era to a pre-antibiotic era, and it looks like we have nothing to fight in this battle provided the right measures are not adhered to.”

Dr. Dhruva Chaudhry Sr. Professor & Head, Department of Pulmonary Medicine, Pt. B. D. Sharma, PGIMS, Rohtak,  said “It’s equally important that the public must understand the severity of the issue. We get people who have a running nose, or sore throat with a cough who come up saying they have had azithromycin and it is not responding. So, people should act responsibly, and they must not take antibiotics without a prescription. We also need to have a behaviour which is conducive to personal health as well as public health. This message needs to be sent out to all that the privilege in terms of the modern medicine and longevity that we have now if we want to enjoy it fully, then we should be preserving it.”

Dr. Ajoy Sarkar, Consultant physician and Specialist in Respiratory & Critical Care Medicine, Peerless Hospital & B K Roy Research Centre, Kolkata stated “We should take antibiotics rationally, responsibly and not abuse the intake of such medicines. Before 1940, we never really had antibiotics. Alexander Fleming invented the penicillin post which the society has been drowning in antibiotics just like water in the sea. In every other corner, you’ll find these antibiotics, but hardly any will work in the near future, leading us back to the pre-antibiotic era.”

About Post Author

Editor Desk

Antara Tripathy M.Sc., B.Ed. by qualification and bring 15 years of media reporting experience.. Coverred many illustarted events like, G20, ICC,MCCI,British High Commission, Bangladesh etc. She took over from the founder Editor of IBG NEWS Suman Munshi (15/Mar/2012- 09/Aug/2018 and October 2020 to 13 June 2023).
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