“Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
Many bacterial pathogens are exhibiting resistance to increasing numbers of antibiotics making it much more challenging to treat the infections caused by these microbes. In many reports in the media and perhaps even in discussions among physicians and biomedical scientists, these bacteria are freque...
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doaj-38fb3124d03e433aa42d7792806583122020-11-24T23:54:15ZengCase Western Reserve UniversityPathogens and Immunity2469-29642016-12-011230430710.20411/pai.v1i2.16035“Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant BacteriaNeil S. Greenspan0Professor of Pathology at Case and the Director of the Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics Laboratory at University Hospitals Case Medical CenterMany bacterial pathogens are exhibiting resistance to increasing numbers of antibiotics making it much more challenging to treat the infections caused by these microbes. In many reports in the media and perhaps even in discussions among physicians and biomedical scientists, these bacteria are frequently referred to as “bugs” with the prefix “super” appended. This terminology has a high potential to elicit unjustified inferences and fails to highlight the broader evolutionary context. Understanding the full range of biological and evolutionary factors that influence the spread and outcomes of infections is critical to formulating effective individual therapies and public health interventions. Therefore, more accurate terminology should be used to refer these multidrug-resistant bacteria.https://paijournal.com/index.php/paijournal/article/view/160bacterial pathogenantibiotic resistancefitnessvirulencetransmissibilityresistance to immunityevolutioncolistinEscherichia coliMycobacterium tuberculosismultidrug resistance (MDR)extreme drug resistance (XDR)Clostridium difficile |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Neil S. Greenspan |
spellingShingle |
Neil S. Greenspan “Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Pathogens and Immunity bacterial pathogen antibiotic resistance fitness virulence transmissibility resistance to immunity evolution colistin Escherichia coli Mycobacterium tuberculosis multidrug resistance (MDR) extreme drug resistance (XDR) Clostridium difficile |
author_facet |
Neil S. Greenspan |
author_sort |
Neil S. Greenspan |
title |
“Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria |
title_short |
“Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria |
title_full |
“Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria |
title_fullStr |
“Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria |
title_full_unstemmed |
“Infectious Supercarelessness” in Discussing Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria |
title_sort |
“infectious supercarelessness” in discussing antibiotic-resistant bacteria |
publisher |
Case Western Reserve University |
series |
Pathogens and Immunity |
issn |
2469-2964 |
publishDate |
2016-12-01 |
description |
Many bacterial pathogens are exhibiting resistance to increasing numbers of antibiotics making it much more challenging to treat the infections caused by these microbes. In many reports in the media and perhaps even in discussions among physicians and biomedical scientists, these bacteria are frequently referred to as “bugs” with the prefix “super” appended. This terminology has a high potential to elicit unjustified inferences and fails to highlight the broader evolutionary context. Understanding the full range of biological and evolutionary factors that influence the spread and outcomes of infections is critical to formulating effective individual therapies and public health interventions. Therefore, more accurate terminology should be used to refer these multidrug-resistant bacteria. |
topic |
bacterial pathogen antibiotic resistance fitness virulence transmissibility resistance to immunity evolution colistin Escherichia coli Mycobacterium tuberculosis multidrug resistance (MDR) extreme drug resistance (XDR) Clostridium difficile |
url |
https://paijournal.com/index.php/paijournal/article/view/160 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT neilsgreenspan infectioussupercarelessnessindiscussingantibioticresistantbacteria |
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