Ramanan Laxminarayan: The coming crisis in antibiotics
Ramanan Laxminarayan: 迫在眉睫的抗生素危机
At the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy, economist Ramanan Laxminarayan looks at big-picture issues of global health. Full bio
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treated with an antibiotic
while working in the garden.
his head was swollen
医院接受治疗,
(译注:澳洲药理学家)
(译注:苏格兰药学家)
used to treat a human,
knew if the drug would work,
这种药是否有效,
that would kill the patient,
they might as well use it
牛津警察的身上,
his appetite came back.
run out of penicillin,
was run with his urine
the penicillin from his urine
millions of other people,
again in the early 1940s,
盘尼西林治疗的孩子,
wonder drug, penicillin.
她已经康复。
used rather frivolously
with just a cold or the flu,
responded to an antibiotic,
used in large quantities
被大量使用,
means in small concentrations,
on the price of meat,
antibiotics on animals,
并没有用在生病的动物身上,
selection pressure on bacteria
about this in the newspapers,
看到过这个信息,
of carbapenem resistance in acinetobacter.
不动杆菌对碳青霉烯的抗药性。
医疗材料上的细菌,
across the United States.
when we play the video.
you might say, well,
to use antibiotics as much,
如何尽量少用抗生素,
not to demand antibiotics,
对抗生素的依赖,
fundamental about antibiotics
具备一些基本性质
others are affected as well,
choose to drive to work
these costs into consideration.
call a problem of the commons,
of antibiotics as well:
that they impose on others
and climate change.
you can deal with the problem.
use of the oil that we have,
利用现有的原油,
"drill, baby, drill" option,
“不断开采”方式,
is to go find new antibiotics.
找到新的抗生素。
因为如果我们大量的
for conservation of oil
to happen for antibiotics.
to happen, which is that
to make the investments
this particular picture,
就会被吃掉。
playing against the bacteria,
ahead of the bacteria?
game that can be sustained,
can borrow from energy
the costs of pollution
which don't pollute as much
good substitutes for antibiotics?
hospital infection control
the seasonal influenza.
as in many other countries,
something like tradeable permits.
fact that we might not
我们可能
people who have infections,
受到感染的人都用上,
be on the basis of clinical need,
informational feedback,
some information back
可能他们能够重新考虑
been introduced since then —
paying 10 cents a day for antibiotics,
10美分在抗生素上的
antibiotics as a given
looking at other technologies,
gasoline prices are a signal
seem unusual for antibiotics,
看起来不太寻常,
for a few months or perhaps a year,
多维持几个月或者一年,
antibiotics starts going higher,
market does actually respond,
antibiotics and development.
permanent solutions.
一劳永逸的解决方案。
whatever the technology might be,
way to work around it.
this is just a problem
have the exact same
many other fields as well,
in India and South Africa.
treat malaria around the world
我们就需要采取目前看来安全有效的方式
safe and efficacious.
know about head lice,
specialty there is bedbugs.
example from across the pond.
also resistant to poisons.
to all of these things is
the last 70, 80 or 100 years
或者一百年左右,
掌控大自然的能力
evolution was going to find
start thinking about them
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ramanan Laxminarayan - Drug-resistance economistAt the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy, economist Ramanan Laxminarayan looks at big-picture issues of global health.
Why you should listen
Economist Ramanan Laxminarayan works to improve understanding of drug resistance as a problem of managing a shared global resource. As Director and Senior Fellow at the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy (CDDEP), he is interested in cross-disciplinary, pragmatic solutions to reduce drug resistance. He has advised the World Health Organization and World Bank on evaluating malaria treatment policy, vaccination strategies, the economic burden of tuberculosis, and control of non-communicable diseases. He was a key architect of the Affordable Medicines Facility for malaria, a novel financing mechanism to improve access and delay resistance to antimalarial drugs. In 2012, he created the Immunization Technical Support Unit in India, which has been credited with improving the immunization program in the country. He teaches at Princeton.
As he says: "It has been a long time since people died of untreatable bacterial infections, and the prospect of returning to that world is worrying."Ramanan Laxminarayan | Speaker | TED.com