Anti-Microbial Resistance in India: Causes, Consequences & Prevention - IAS EXPRESS
$ 13.99 · 4.8 (744) · In stock
There are a number of diseases that occur due to microbes (microorganisms) like bacteria, virus, and parasites. Antibiotics fight against these microbes and they are widely used in the treatment and for preventing infections. However, the problem arises when people consume these antibiotics frequently. This creates antibiotic resistance where the drug does not benefit human health, but of the microbes as they are used to the drug. By the year 2050, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is estimated to account for around 10 million deaths each year around the world, of which 2 million are expected to occur in India alone. Around 30% of neonatal sepsis deaths in India are associated with AMR. Therefore India, a pharma super-power, should fix this grave threat of antimicrobial resistance.
The Challenge of Anti-Microbial Resistance
India's G20 Presidency: Opportunity For Next Big Leap On 'One
A manifesto for tackling the silent pandemic of Antimicrobial
Frontiers Barriers and Enablers for Adherence to Antiretroviral
antimicrobial resistance - INSIGHTSIAS - Simplifying UPSC IAS Exam
OECD released “One Health Framework” report UPSC
Antimicrobial Resistance - an overview
Anti-Microbial Resistance in India: Causes, Consequences
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR)