Accra, Nov. 12, - Mr Kwaku
Agyeman-Manu, the Minister of Health, on Monday said everyone, including health
workers, must get involved in the antibiotic resistance campaign and urged the
public to adhere to the simple best practices to prevent further re-occurrence.
He said antibiotic resistance had
come about due to many complicated factors and needed to be tackled
holistically.
The Minister said this in a
speech read on his behalf at the launch of this year’s World Antibiotics
Awareness Week (WAAW) on the theme: “Think Twice. Seek Advice,” in Accra.
It was organised jointly by the
Ministry and the Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana (PSGH) in collaboration with
the World Health Organisation (WHO), Organisation of Food and Agriculture,
World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and Hope For Future Generation, a
Civil Society Organisation.
WAAW is celebrated every year in
November to increase global awareness of antibiotics resistance and to
encourage best practices among the public, health workers and policy makers to
avoid the further emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance.
Mr Agyeman-Manu said the major
cause of resistance had been attributed to irresponsible use including
incorrect medical indications, inappropriate self-medication, non-adherence to
therapy, over-the-counter sale of antibiotics from unlicensed pharmacies and
unapproved outlets and inappropriate use in animals across all sectors.
“When antibiotics are obtained
and used inappropriately, selective pressure is brought to bear, favouring the
emergence of resistance strains. Without urgent action, we are heading for a
post-antibiotic era, where common infectious diseases will pose a challenge to
treatment,” he added.
“For Ghana, this phenomenon could
have dire consequences on the poor and vulnerable as well as the affluent.
Thus, effort at controlling and containing resistance have been designed from a
broad perspective as well as within the framework of regional and global
networking and information sharing.”
These, interventions, the
Minister said, had been duly put into policy and a comprehensive action plan
with monitoring and evaluation framework also developed.
Dr Owen Kaluwa, the WHO Country
Representative to Ghana, said this year, the Organisation had introduced
sub-themes to showcase the immense work underway to tackle antimicrobial
resistance, which demonstrated “how antibiotics are linked to humans, animals
and the environment”.
“Nothing less than global health
security is at stake when antibiotics are misused, from being miracle
life-savers, antibiotics are becoming ineffective against resistant infections,
which can affect anyone of any age, in any country at any time,” he said.
“Antibiotic resistance occurs
when bacteria (not in humans or animals) become resistant to the active
ingredients in these medicines. These resistant bacteria may infect humans and
animals, making infections like pneumonia, tuberculosis and gonorrhoea harder
to treat.”
“Africa lacks data on the scope
and scale of antibiotic resistance. However, we know that antibiotic resistance
is rising because common bacteria, which cause urinary tract infections,
diarrhoea and septic wounds, among others, are becoming resistant to readily
available and prescribed antibiotics.”
Mr Kaluwa, therefore, suggested
investments to build a smarter world for safe and effective medicines, saying;
“Research and development is the cornerstone of new, life-saving antibiotics.”
He called on governments, funding
agencies and the private sector to invest and work together to secure safe,
effective medicines for generations to come.
Dr Bashiru Boi Kikimoto, the Head
of Public Health of Veterinary Services, said it was estimated that over 70 per
cent of all antimicrobials in use globally were in the animal sector, with only
30 per cent used in humans.
That, he said, was a big
challenge to the veterinary profession, hence, the more reason why OIE had
tasked all countries through the veterinary medical focal persons to gather
data on antimicrobials in use in various countries.
Dr Kofi Afatse, the FAO
Representative, said antibiotic resistance was becoming a public concern and
called for measures to counter the menace at all levels through intensive
public awareness creation.
Ms Yvonne Esseku, the Vice
President of PSGH, called on all stakeholders to do their part to preserve “the
antibiotics that we have”.
That, she said, they should be
done through acquiring antibiotics from qualified health professionals and to
complete the full course as prescribed even when one felt better after a few
days of treatment.
She also advised the public to
discuss issues about antibiotics with pharmacists, obtain them with
prescriptions, share information about their abuse and misuse with others and
avoid sharing them with friends even if they seemed to have the same symptoms.
GNA

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