Anti-Microbial Resistance
Anti-Microbial Resistance
World Health Organization has declared Anti-Microbial Resistance as one of the top 10 public health concerns worldwide. Misuse and overuse of antimicrobials, inadequate sanitation facilities,
and the absence of proper disease control mechanisms is the main reason for Anti- Microbial Resistance.
Anti-microbials are medicines that can destroy microorganisms having disease-causing potential. It includes antibiotics, antivirals, antifungals, and antiparasitics. Anti-Microbial Resistance is basically a phenomenon where our body is resistant to such medicines.
Anti-microbial resistance can spread naturally over time from person to person or person to animal and even plants to animals. Common bacterial infections like urinary tract infections, sepsis, and sexually transmitted diseases which are frequently treated by antibiotics and show many a time show resistance to antimicrobials. For example, the rate of resistance to ciprofloxacin, an antibiotic commonly used to treat urinary tract infections, varied from 8.4%to 92.9% for Escherichia coli and from 4.1% to 79.4% for Klebsiella pneumoniae in countries reporting to the Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System (GLASS).
AMR being a complex problem needs a combined effort from the healthcare sector, research, social awareness, policies, and legislation to get a better healthcare outcome.
International Institute of Innovation and Technology is one of the eminent public health research institutes in India having state-of-the-art laboratory facility. Our workhorse BD PHOENIX is an extremely high-end machine capable of AMR profiling from the blood culture of patient samples within 6-16 hours from sample collection.

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