There are an awful lot of things to worry about in the world. Are “superbugs” among them? That is, how worried should we be that bacteria will develop resistance to our best antibiotics, meaning infections will run rampant and even basic surgery is out of the question?
In this episode of The Studies Show, Tom and Stuart wash their hands and then dig in to the evidence on the coming antimicrobial crisis. Exactly how many deaths can we expect from untreatable resistant infections? Turns out the question is, ahem, resistant to easy answers. (Sorry).
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Show notes
Andreas Bäumler on “the coming microbial crisis”
Possible source for how many people used to die in surgery
BMJ article on the evidence (or lack of) showing that completing an antibiotic course is necessary
Satirical post on how the length of a course is calculated
Our World In Data on how many people die from cancer each year
UK Government review of antimicrobial resistance (from 2014), giving the 10m figure.
2016 paper in PLOS Medicine criticising the modelling that led to the 10m figure
September 2024 paper in the Lancet with a more up-to-date calculation
EU report on how MRSA rates dropped
Article on the wildly successful UK attempt to cut MRSA infections
Study on how many antibiotics are in the clinical “pipeline”
Thread on studies showing that using antibiotics prophylactically cut child mortality in sub-Sarahan Africa by 14%
Credits
The Studies Show is produced by Julian Mayers at Yada Yada Productions.
Episode 51: Antimicrobial resistance