Newsweek

Antibiotic-Resistant Infections Spiking in Children

Just as the World Health Organization releases its first-ever list of such pathogens, a new study reveals an alarming spike in antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections among children. And infectious disease experts are scared.
An electronic microscope image of Escherichia coli. E. coli is a member of the Enterobacteriaceae bacterial family, which is showing dangerous increases in antibiotic resistance.
03_01_Antibiotics_01

The dangers of antibiotic-resistant bacteria have reached the pediatric ward. According to a new study, the number of hospitalized children in the U.S. infected with bacteria resistant to multiple types of antibiotic drugs surged between 2007 and 2015. The study is the first to confirm the extent of infections with multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria—superbugs, many experts call them—among children, and underscores the alarming proliferation of bacterial pathogens our medications no longer treat.  

To investigate the prevalence of MDR bacteria among children, researchers from studied patient data from 48 children’s hospitals across the country. Using diagnostic and a bacterial family that includes and , among many others. And among these diagnoses, they singled out those that were categorized as multi-drug resistant.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek

Newsweek1 min read
Dawn to Dust
A couple look out over the Greek capital from Tourkovounia Hill as the city lies cloaked in Saharan dust on April 23. The National Observatory of Athens said winds blew “Minerva Red”—seen from a NASA satellite—over the Eastern Mediterranean region, b
Newsweek7 min readWorld
Resurgence of Global Mayhem
WITH MUCH OF INTERNATIONAL ATTENTION gripped by the ongoing war in the Gaza Strip, the Islamic State militant group has been steadily ramping up operations across continents and setting the stage for a resurgence of global mayhem. This latent threat
Newsweek2 min read
Eugenio Derbez
FOR EUGENIO DERBEZ, MAKING THE TRANSITION FROM BEING ONE OF Mexico’s most recognizable faces in comedy to the American market was not easy. “We don’t laugh at the same things. Humor in Mexico and in the U.S. is completely different. I had to reinvent

Related