AI Article Synopsis

  • A variety of antimicrobial agents were promoted as potential treatments during the COVID-19 pandemic, with a noticeable increase in their use, particularly in developing countries, where misuse has been more pronounced.
  • This misuse contributes to rising antimicrobial resistance, especially since these regions have already faced challenges with drug-resistant organisms prior to the pandemic.
  • The review seeks to examine how the COVID-19 crisis has impacted antimicrobial use and resistance in lower-middle-income countries, looking at unique factors that contribute to resistance and proposing solutions to mitigate the issue.

Article Abstract

A wide range of antimicrobial agents were touted as potential remedies during the COVID-19 pandemic. While both developed and developing countries have recorded an increase in the use of antimicrobial drugs, use and misuse have occurred to a far greater degree in developing countries. This can have deleterious consequences on antimicrobial resistance, especially when various developing countries have already reported the emergence of various drug-resistant organisms even before the pandemic. Telemedicine services, societal and cultural pressures, and bacterial co-infections can predispose to overwhelming antimicrobial prescriptions. The emergence of new multidrug resistance species is a major concern for the developing world especially since health services are already overburdened and lack the diagnostic capabilities and basic amenities for infection prevention and control. This can lead to outbreaks and the rampant spread of such microorganisms. Improper waste management and disposal from hospitals and communities establish freshwater runoffs as hubs of various microorganisms that can predispose to the rise of multidrug-resistant species. Microplastics' ability to act as vectors for antibiotic-resistant organisms is also particularly concerning for lower-middle-income countries. In this review, we aim to study the impact of antimicrobial use during the COVID-19 pandemic and antimicrobial resistance in lower middle-income countries, by understanding various determinants of resistance unique to the developing world and exploring solutions to combat the problem.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8570918PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.15190/d.2021.6DOI Listing

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