AMR refers to the ability of a bacterium, virus or some other microbe to stop an antibiotic (or antimicrobial) from working against it.
Business
Standard : The government-appointed committee tasked with
preparing the new National List of Essential Medicines (NLEM) on
Monday asked for industry feedback on which group of antibiotics
should be excluded from the list.
The
suggestions were sought during a stakeholders' meeting in Delhi, the
focus of which was fighting the menace of antimicrobial resistance
(AMR) in India. The expert committee, sources claimed, is considering
the industry proposal to issue a draft NLEM list for public
consultation in the interest of transparency and seek industry
comments in a time-bound manner.
AMR
refers to the ability of a bacterium, virus or some other microbe to
stop an antibiotic (or antimicrobial) from working against it. This
results in treatments becoming in-effective and infections not only
persist but also spread to others.
Industry
sources claimed that the Standing National Committee on Medicine
(SNCM), which is working on drafting the new NLEM, has asked the
industry to get back with their list of groups of antibiotics that
need to be removed from the NLEM as Indian population has become
resistant to these. Also, the SNCM wants to know which other groups
of antibiotics be included on the list this time. The NLEM 2015 has
roughly 376 medicines and medical devices.
The
sources said industry representatives proposed that all non-effective
drugs be deleted from the NLEM and drugs for which resistance is
building up should not be considered. The industry feels inclusion in
the NLEM
may result in over-prescription and overuse, and increase the cases
of resistance.
"Only
the Access category of the WHO AMR list should be considered for
inclusion in NLEM," the industry said. The expert committee,
however, said that drugs from all three categories of WHO AMR list —
i.e., Access, Watch and Reserve — are under consideration for
preparing the new NLEM.
A
recent study by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has
found that two of every three healthy Indians that it tested had
antibiotic-resistant organisms in their digestive tracts.
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