Sunday, February 28, 2021

Online Discussion on 4th March 2021 from 17:00-19:00 (IST)

WHO Cancer Centre for LMIC, Mumbai and Indian Initiative for Management of Antibiotic Resistance, India 

Present
Online Discussion on 4th March 2021 from 17:00-19:00 (IST) 

 


Theme: Drugs, Antimicrobial Resistance and allied 

 

Moderators: Dr. Ashok Tamhankar and Dr. Nishtha Khatri

 

Agenda:

1.Challenges of One Health Antibiotic Stewardship in rural community settings

Presentation: 17:00 – 17:40 and Q&A: 17:40 – 18:00
Speaker: Dr. Meenakshi Gautham
London School of hygiene and Tropical Medicine
DiscussantsDr. Vishal Diwan: Scientist at ICMR- National Institute for Research in Environmental Health (NIREH) & Dr. KV Arulalan: Primary care pediatrician, chief consultant, A A Childcare, Vellore; Former President, IMA, Vellore

2. Bacteriophage therapy as an alternative therapeutic strategy for MRSA infections

Presentation: 18:00 – 18:30; and Q&A: 18:30 – 19:00
SpeakerDr. Archana L., PhD scholar, Antibiotic Resistance and Phage Therapy Lab, VIT, Vellore
Discussants: Dr. Geetu Bhandoria: Gyne-Oncologist and Obstetrician, Command Hospital, Kolkata and  Member, Junior Editorial Board, International Journal of Gyn Cancer & Dr. Bhakti Sarang, Consultant WHOCC for research in surgical care delivery in LMICs, Mumbai & Associate Professor, Surgery, Terna Medical College and Hospital, Navi Mumbai

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Antimicrobial Resistance and International Travel

Contributed by Dr. Ashok Tamhankar and Dr. Nishtha Khatri

A systematic review of literature on the impact of travel on the dissemination of AMR has revealed that high-income countries were more likely to be recipient for AMR originating from middle- and low-income countries. Travellers from Asia carried 36% of the total isolates with resistant bacteria. Of the total isolates 91.83% were enteric bacteria. Beta-lactams and quinolone drug-resistant organisms were the most documented, accounting for 35% and 31%. Medical tourism was twice as likely to be associated with multidrug-resistant organisms than general travel. Health systems need to take this into account and design curative measures.

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Can vaccination help overcome antimicrobial resistance?

Contributed by Dr. Nishtha Khatri & Dr. Ashok Tamhankar



The relatedness between vaccination and reduction in use of antibiotics seems to be a newly surfacing area of interest for researchers. Emerging evidence is suggestive that routine childhood vaccination could lower antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The hypothesis behind this is that vaccination could possibly reduce the burden of vaccine preventable diseases and secondary infections by reducing the consumption of antimicrobials. A recent study published in the ‘Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences’ looked into the association between vaccine use and antibiotic consumption from 2009 to 2017 in the private health sector in India. This study showed that vaccines induced long term reduction in antibiotic usage in the Indian scenario. These findings were seen to be in synchrony with the findings from studies conducted in other low and middle income countries.However, vaccination alone cannot curb AMR and other approaches such as stewardship programmes, infection control measures must be executed in an efficient manner to lower antibiotic use.