How Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Complicates Other Health Conditions
Superbugs can increase infection risks
Jun 09, 2022
Nov 08, 2022
Created With SupportDeborah D. Gordon has spent her career trying to level the playing field for healthcare consumers. She is co-founder of Umbra Health Advocacy, a marketplace for patient advocacy services, and co-director of the Alliance of Professional Health Advocates, the premiere membership organization for independent advocates. She is the author of "The Health Care Consumer's Manifesto: How to Get the Most for Your Money," based on consumer research she conducted as a senior fellow in the Harvard Kennedy School's Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government. Deb previously spent more than two decades in healthcare leadership roles, including chief marketing officer for a Massachusetts health plan and CEO of a health technology company. Deb is an Aspen Institute Health Innovators Fellow, an Eisenhower Fellow and a Boston Business Journal 40-under-40 honoree. Her contributions have appeared in JAMA Network Open, the Harvard Business Review blog, USA Today, RealClear Politics, The Hill and Managed Care Magazine. She earned a BA in bioethics from Brown University and an MBA with distinction from Harvard Business School.
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Superbugs can increase infection risks
Medically reviewed by Dr. Thomas Sandora
What is antimicrobial resistance (AMR)?
Tiny germs (microbes) — like bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites — cause disease.
These microbes are always changing, which means medicines to fight them can stop working.
This is called “antimicrobial resistance” (AMR).
When microbes have AMR, they are called superbugs.
AMR makes infections harder to treat.
What causes AMR?
Antimicrobial drugs can stop working for two main reasons:
AMR by the numbers
Influenza A, which causes half of human flu cases, has developed resistance to one class of antivirals. It also resisted another class of antivirals, which includes Tamiflu, during certain flu seasons.
How AMR can make health conditions worse
People with certain health conditions need antimicrobials to fight off or prevent infections.
Some common infections have become difficult to treat because of AMR, like:
If antimicrobials don’t work, the consequences can be serious, including:
What you can do to prevent AMR
This resource was created with support from Pfizer Inc.