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Preventing Deaths in Africa by Improving Antibiotic Access and Effectiveness
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Alliance for the
Prudent Use of Antibiotics (APUA) today announced a $1.37 million grant
from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, to explore ways of reducing
millions of preventable deaths from severe respiratory and diarrheal
infections in Africa. This project was announced in conjunction with a
colloquium at the annual ICAAC/IDSA meeting warning of increasing
antibiotic resistance.
The project will investigate ways to fast-track antibiotics to sick
children in the village before they succumb to severe diarrhea or acute
respiratory illnesses. APUA will work with local field staff in Zambia
and Uganda to map antibiotic supply and distribution channels, detect
counterfeit drugs and measure laboratory capacity to monitor antibiotic
resistance. It will also document the prevalence and costs of drug
resistance.
In the developing world, antibiotics are often out of reach for patients
and dispensed by health workers and street vendors without adequate
training or laboratory guidance. "Because of rapidly increasing
antibiotic resistance, no currently available antibiotic can be assumed
to be active against a particular pathogen. Continual monitoring is
needed to determine the right drug choice," said Stuart B. Levy, MD,
President of APUA and Professor of Medicine and Microbiology at Tufts
University School of Medicine. The project builds on 27 years of APUA's
global research and advocacy work to improve antibiotic access and
effectiveness worldwide.
Pneumonia and severe diarrhea are leading causes of death in Sub Saharan
Africa. Each year, more than three million children in developing
countries die from acute respiratory infections, and approximately 1.9
million children die from diarrheal diseases. Penicillin resistance for
Strep pneumoniae is as high as 50 percent in some parts of Africa.
Douglas Holtzman, PhD, MPH of the Gates Foundation notes: "This project
will provide essential field data needed to improve antibiotic access
and use in developing countries. The ultimate goal is to reduce the
public health threat of drug resistance while saving more lives."
Established in 1981, by Stuart B. Levy, MD, a global infectious disease
expert, the Boston-based APUA has affiliates in more than 60 countries,
including 11 in Sub-Saharan Africa. APUA's mission is to promote
appropriate antimicrobial access and preserve the power of antibiotics.
(see http://www.apua.org/ )
Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics (APUA) 617-636-0966
SOURCE Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics (APUA)