Maryn McKenna: What do we do when antibiotics don't work any more?
玛芮恩·麦肯纳: 当抗生素都失去作用时我们要怎么办?
Maryn McKenna recounts the often terrifying stories behind emerging drug-resistant diseases that medical science is barely keeping at bay. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
and a semi-pro basketball player
和一位半职业篮球运动员,
he loved being a fireman,
he started polishing all the brass,
the fittings on the walls,
his shoulder started to hurt.
and when they got the local doctor in,
当他们请来医生时,
and took him to the hospital.
把他带到医院
that he had an infection,
have called "blood poisoning,"
because the things we use now
是因为我们现在拥有的
the first antibiotic,
either recovered, if they were lucky,
能够康复算是幸运的,
shaking with chills,
lined up to give him transfusions
surging through his blood.
my great uncle died.
of cancer or heart disease,
in the West today.
because they didn't live long enough
of the Industrial Revolution --
when antibiotics arrived.
been a death sentence
you recovered from in days.
the golden epoch of the miracle drugs.
我们就一直生活在特效药的黄金时代中
of the pre-antibiotic era.
最后的日子中去世的
of the post-antibiotic era,
when simple infections
will kill people once again.
这些感染已经夺取了很多人的性命了
because of a phenomenon
for resources, for food,
that they direct against each other.
致命的化合物攻击对方
that chemical attack.
and made our own versions of them,
我们自己版本的化合物
the way they always had.
arrived by 1945.
the most recent drugs, in 2003,
just a year later in 2004.
a game of leapfrog --
我们像是在做一个蛙跳的游戏 --
and then resistance again --
that pharmaceutical companies
以至于制药公司
is not in their best interest,
moving across the world
than 100 antibiotics
并带有副作用
Control and Prevention, the CDC,
疾病控制与预防中心(CDC),
to all but two drugs.
with a different infection
from India into China, Asia, Africa,
中国,亚洲,非洲,
are extraordinary cases,
by the British government
on Antimicrobial Resistance
right now is 700,000 deaths a year.
that you don't feel at risk,
所以我们感觉不到风险,
were hospital patients
near the ends of their lives,
are remote from us,
none of us do,
我们所有人都想不到的是
almost all of modern life.
with weakened immune systems --
都失去了保护 --
foreign objects in the body:
安装异物的治疗:
治疗糖尿病的胰岛素磊
need new hips and knees?
膝关节置换?
that without antibiotics,
the hidden spaces of the body.
that now seem minor.
in the cleanest hospitals,
孕产妇的死亡率
out of every 10.
肺炎会夺走3个孩子的生命
we live our everyday lives.
could kill you,
your Christmas lights,
to receive penicillin,
Albert Alexander,
that his scalp oozed pus
something very simple.
and scratched his face on a thorn.
which estimates that the worldwide toll
get this under control by 2050,
控制现在的情况,
will be 10 million deaths a year.
全球死亡人数会上升到一千万
we did it to ourselves.
这都是我们的所作所为
biological process,
for accelerating it.
that now seems shocking.
over the counter until the 1950s.
most antibiotics still are.
in hospitals are unnecessary.
written in doctor's offices
that antibiotics cannot help.
get antibiotics every day of their lives,
许多家畜每天都进食抗生素,
and to protect them against
they are raised in.
go to farm animals, not to humans,
不是病人,
that move off the farm
它们从农场流到了
citrus, against disease.
their DNA to each other
a suitcase at an airport,
that resistance into existence,
the man who discovered penicillin.
in 1945 in recognition,
this is what he said:
with penicillin treatment
for the death of a man
can be averted."
避免这个厄运。“
on novel antibiotics,
have never seen before.
into making antibiotics again.
去吸引其它公司再次制造去抗生素
every 20 minutes.
10 years to derive a new drug.
才能制成一种新的药
to tell us automatically and specifically
并且自动、具体地
into drug order systems
gets a second look.
to give up antibiotic use.
is emerging next.
to change a habit.
we've done that in the past.
我们曾经做到过
into the streets,
to the possibility of cancer,
were expensive,
around antibiotic use too.
of antibiotic resistance
a fluorescent lightbulb
about climate change,
the deforestation from palm oil,
an overwhelming problem.
是什么样的感觉
for antibiotic use too.
去改变抗生素的使用
if we're not sure it's the right one.
那就放弃它
for our kid's ear infection
不要执意为孩子的耳部感染开处方,
or shrimp or fruit
of the post-antibiotic world.
the antibiotic era in 1943.
up to the edge of disaster.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Maryn McKenna - Public health journalistMaryn McKenna recounts the often terrifying stories behind emerging drug-resistant diseases that medical science is barely keeping at bay.
Why you should listen
Maryn McKenna’s harrowing stories of hunting down anthrax with the CDC and her chronicle of antibiotic-resistant staph infections in Superbug earned her the nickname “scary disease girl” among her colleagues.
But her investigations into public health don’t stop there: she blogs and writes on the history of epidemics and the public health challenges posed by factory farming. For her forthcoming book, McKenna is researching the symbiotic history of food production and antibiotics, and how their use impacts our lives, societies and the potential for illness.
Maryn McKenna | Speaker | TED.com