Imagine a world where a routine surgery, a simple urinary tract infection, or a childhood pneumonia becomes a death sentence โ because the antibiotics we rely on no longer work. This is not science fiction. It is the trajectory we are on.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) โ the ability of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites to evolve and resist the drugs used to treat them โ is one of the gravest threats to global health. The O’Neill Commission estimated that without action, AMR could kill 10 million people annually by 2050, surpassing cancer as a cause of death. India is at the epicentre of this crisis.
Why India Is Especially Vulnerable
- Antibiotic overuse: India is the world’s largest consumer of antibiotics. Many are sold without prescriptions at pharmacies โ a practice that should be illegal but remains rampant.
- Self-medication: Surveys show that 50โ80% of antibiotic use in India is without a prescription. People take antibiotics for viral infections (colds, flu) against which they have zero effect.
- Agricultural overuse: Antibiotics are used extensively as growth promoters in poultry and livestock farming, driving resistance in bacteria that then reach humans through the food chain.
- Sanitation and infection control gaps: Poor handwashing practices, open defecation, and inadequate hospital infection control accelerate resistance spread.
The Human Cost Already Being Paid
India already carries one of the world’s highest burdens of drug-resistant infections. NDM-1 (New Delhi Metallo-beta-lactamase), a resistance mechanism first identified in India in 2009, has since spread to 70+ countries. Drug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) affects over 1.3 lakh Indians every year. Carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella causes untreatable bloodstream infections in ICUs across the country.
What Every Individual Can Do
- Never take antibiotics without a doctor’s prescription
- Complete the full antibiotic course โ stopping early allows resistant bacteria to survive and multiply
- Never demand antibiotics from a doctor for colds, flu, or sore throats โ these are viral and unaffected by antibiotics
- Practise rigorous handwashing โ the most effective barrier against infection spread
- Ensure your children are fully vaccinated โ preventing infections reduces antibiotic need
โ ๏ธ Medical Disclaimer: This article is for public health education only. Antibiotic treatment decisions must be made by a qualified healthcare professional.


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