Study reveals India's Antibiotic Treatment Gap: Only 8% Infections Properly Treated
New Delhi: A study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases revealed that only about 8% of bacterial infections in India in 2019 were treated appropriately. Additionally, nearly 15 lakh bacterial infections across eight low- and middle-income countries, including India, were found to be resistant to carbapenems, a commonly used antibiotic.
Carbapenems are used for treating severe infections-such as those acquired from being inside a hospital, where bacteria resistant to antibiotics are abundant.
Of the 15 lakh bacterial infections, only over a lakh treatment courses were procured-the resulting treatment gap meant that only 6.9 per cent of the patients were treated appropriately, researchers, including those from the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership (GARDP), Switzerland, found.
"India procured most of the treatment courses (80.5 per cent; 83,468 courses), with 7.8 per cent of infections treated appropriately," the authors wrote.
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