Antibiotic use in Healthcare.

Antibiotic use in Healthcare.

  • Title page
  • Introduction— (I have done this already).
  • Body of the paper that covers the main and subtopics.
  • Identify any gaps in the research that you think could be a research topic in the future.
  • Conclusion
  • References

Your paper should meet the following requirements:

  • Be six to seven pages in length, including the introduction, but not including the title or reference pages.
  • Be formatted according to 7th APA writing guidelines.
  • Provide support for your statements with in-text citations from the ten scholarly articles you have gathered.(Attached)

Requirements: 6-7 pages

Here is the introduction part….

Introduction:

Antibiotics have reduced significantly bacterial infection-related deaths and side effects, paving the way for modern medicine. Even so, the widespread use of antibiotics comes at a cost. Antibiotic use helps promote the growth and spread of resistant strains, resulting in the depletion of this precious resource. After 70 years of extreme antibiotic use by humans, the World Health Organization advises that the rise in antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) “poses a threat modern medicine’s achievements.” Antibiotic resistance, according to some, will soon kill more people than cancer. ARB can be obtained in two ways: occasionally, through the emergence of a de novo resistance mechanism in a specific patient, or much more commonly, through the transmitting of bacteria that are already resistant (Almagor et al. 2018). The recent rise of multi drug resistance bacteria is one of the most serious threats to global public health. Because antibiotic use is the primary cause of AR, a reduction in antibiotic use is urgently needed (Ancillotti et al. 2020).

Although since initiation of the first effective antimicrobial in 1937, there has been a steady increase and spread of drug-resistant bacteria, a phenomenon known colloquially as antimicrobial resistance (AMR). AMR is defined as the ability of infection-causing microorganisms, such as bacteria, to stay alive exposure to medicine that would usually inhibit or kill them. AMR has far-reaching health implications, affecting not just treatment of a main bacterial infection, but also the prophylaxis uses of antibiotics in regular surgeries performed such as caesareans and joint replacements (Byrne et al. 2019).

Antimicrobial resistance poses a particularly daunting threat in the category of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Each year, more than two million people in the United States become ill with antibiotic-resistant diseases, resulting in approximately 23,000 deaths, according to the Center of Disease Control and Prevention. Antibiotic resistance impairs the ability of the human immune system to fight infectious diseases. Antibiotic resistance will also have a significant impact on people with chronic conditions such as diabetes, asthma, and rheumatoid arthritis. As a result, antibacterial resistance can develop as a result of physicians prescribing unnecessarily long courses of antibiotics (Dadgostar 2019).

APA

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