Antibiotics
How can we prepare against antibiotic resistant diseases in the future?
What do we do when antibiotics don’t work? Since the discovery of Penicillin antibiotics have come to underpin all of modern medicine – birth by Cesarean section, hip replacements, organ transplantation, caring for wounds on diabetic patients. None of this would be possible without effective antibiotics.
But the medicines we depend are under threat. Decades of overuse has allowed the bacteria that makes us ill to evolve to resist treatment - and this resistance is spreading. In the very near future we may find ourselves living in a world where a simple scratch could have devastating consequences.
Aleks Krotoski and Ben Hammersley visit a hospital to learn which disease control protocols we should be using in our daily lives and uncover why the food we eat, and even the air we breathe may contain resistant bacteria, seek out alternative treatments we could use, and find out how the next generation of scientists can use new techniques to search the natural world for the next wave of antibiotics.
(Photo: Neutrophil white blood cell (green) engulfing methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria (MRSA, pink). Credit: Science Photo Library)
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- Wed 27 Jun 2018 02:32GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service Online, Americas and the Caribbean, UK DAB/Freeview, Europe and the Middle East & West and Central Africa only
- Wed 27 Jun 2018 03:32GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service South Asia & East Asia only
- Wed 27 Jun 2018 04:32GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service Australasia
- Wed 27 Jun 2018 12:32GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service except News Internet
- Wed 27 Jun 2018 21:06GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service except News Internet
- Sun 1 Jul 2018 09:32GMT´óÏó´«Ã½ World Service except News Internet
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