Failure to tackle drug-resistant infections will lead to at
least 10 million extra deaths a year by 2050, a report has warned. To put the
figures in context there are currently 8.2 million deaths a year from cancer. A
“low estimate” of the current number of annual global deaths is put at 700,000.
No country is considered immune from the threat but for some
regions and nations the outlook is particularly bleak. The world’s most
populous countries, India and China, face 2 million and 1 million deaths a year
respectively by 2050 and one in every four deaths in Nigeria by then is
forecast to be attributable to AMR. Africa as a continent “will suffer
greatly”, the report warns.
Being capitalism, the human tragedy is translated into cash
terms. It will cost the global economy up to $100tn (£64tn), $15tn of which is
from Europe, by 2050. Former Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill, who
chaired the report, said “As big as that number seems it almost definitely
underestimates the economic cost.”
He explained that this was because the study
looked only at a subset of drug-resistant bacteria and public-health issues and
did not examine the social costs, the demand on national healthcare systems and
secondary health effects – the danger that interventions that have become
routine in the developed world which rely heavily on antibiotics could be
severely undermined. Caesarian sections, joint replacements and chemotherapy,
by keeping people economically active, could together account for another
$100tn between now and 2050, according to the report, although that amount
would not be completely lost.
The SOYMB blog has previously posted about the pharmaceutical industry's reluctance to invest in research for new antibiotics because of the low profit margins involved.
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