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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/11828
Title: Antimicrobial resistance - the millennium III challenge
Authors: Burduniuc, Aurelia
Keywords: antimicrobial resistance
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: MedEspera
Citation: BURDUNIUC, Aurelia. Antimicrobial resistance - the millennium III challenge. In: MedEspera: the 6th Internat. Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors: abstract book. Chișinău: S. n., 2016, p. 244.
Abstract: Introduction: Antimicrobial resistance has been declared a crisis by the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other relevant organizations. Resistance to antimicrobials presents a major challenge in health care as resistant bacteria dramatically decrease the chances of effectively treating infections and increase the risk of complications. Materials and methods: This paper analysis and describes the major aspects of this topic published during the half-century: the global situation of antibiotic resistance, its major causes and consequences, solutions and conclusions.The study is based on 93 literary sources of foreign authors (France, Bulgaria, USA Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Belgium, Norway etc.) and international organizations. Discussion results:The discovery of antimicrobial agent was one of the greatest achievements of the twentieth century. Paul Ehrlich discovered the first antibiotic Salvarsanin 1910, used to treat syphilis, followed by Alexander Fleming with the "epochal discovery "of penicillin in 1928. These were the starting points for discovering classes of antibiotics present today. Causes for antibiotic resistance are complex and include human behavior at many levels of society: overuse, abuse or misuse, due to incorrect diagnosis.Increased globalization also causes the spread of drug resistance. Antimicrobial resistance knows no national borders, and affects all countries regardless of their economic status. Resistance can spread quickly across different bacterial species, from bacteria in animals to those in humans.The consequences affect everybody in the world. Conclusion: Improving the use of antibiotics is an important patient safety and public health issue as well as a national priority. Solutions to antimicrobial resistance: implementing the National Strategy for combating antibiotic-resistant bacteria; stronger regulation aimed at limiting nonprescription use in humans and in farm animals; rational use infection control in the healthcare setting; rapid diagnostics of rezsitance bacteria;communications campaigns co-ordinated with the broader awareness efforts described above. Key Words: antimicrobial resistance.
URI: http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/11828
ISBN: 978-9975-3028-3-8.
Appears in Collections:MedEspera 2016

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