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|    Antibiotic Overuse In Southeastern State    |
|    29 Oct 14 12:24:10    |
      From: drarwingnuttephd@gmail.com              Antibiotic Overuse In Southeastern States, USA              Last updated: 16 November 2011 at 5am PST              New research shows that parts of the U.S., in particular the Southeast, show       patterns of outpatient antibiotic overuse. According to Extending the Cure, a       project of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy this problem       could intensify the        rate at which these powerful drugs become useless.               The findings coincide with the start of the Centers for Disease Control and       Prevention (CDC) initiative called "Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work",       which is an annual effort to decrease overuse of antibiotics that lasts       throughout the week urging        Americans to use antibiotics wisely. According to the CDC's estimation each       year $1.1 billion is spent on unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions just for       adult upper respiratory infections alone. These prescriptions also accelerate       the development of        resistance to important antibiotic therapies.               This week, Extending the Cure introduced a new tool, the new Drug Resistance       Index (DRI), allowing non-experts to track changes in antibiotic effectiveness       over time. A paper of the British Medical Journal Open describes the new DRI,       which is comparable        with the Consumer Price Index concept.               Extending the Cure has released interactive maps, called ResistanceMap, where       antibiotic consumption in the U.S. from 1999 to 2007 can be tracked and       display the overall decrease in antibiotic dispensing, i.e. 12% over this time       period. Despite this        decrease, these images highlight an alarming trend in high antibiotic use       across the Southeast compared with Pacific Northwest states. In areas where       antibiotic rates are at their highest, like Kentucky and West Virginia for       example, residents are seen        to take almost double as many antibiotics per capita compared with those       living in Alaska and Oregon.               Other key findings of the study show that the highest antibiotic use in the       U.S. are Alabama, Louisiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, although       the maps also display higher than average antibiotics use in other regions of       the country. Antibiotic        use per state can be seen at ResistanceMap.               From 1999 to 2007 prescriptions have soared up by 49% for a powerful class of       antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones. Simultaneously, antibiotic resistance       is on the increase, for example compared to 1999, these drugs currently tend       to be seven times less        effective against Escherichia coli, the most frequent cause of bacterial       infections.               The number one of the antibiotics 'hit list' still remains to be penicillin,       which accounts for almost one out of three prescriptions in the United States.       As physicians increasingly turn to more powerful antibiotics, the market share       of these standard        drugs has simultaneously dropped by 28%.              According to the study, high per capita antibiotic usage could be a sign of       consumers mistakenly demanding antibiotics with physicians prescribing them       for colds or the flu, even though these illnesses are caused by viruses and       cannot be treated with        these drugs. Additional research must be carried out to gain a better       understanding of the driving factors behind antibiotic use.               Written by Petra Rattue                     http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/237775.php              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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