Publication Details
Abstract
Antibiotic resistance act as a crucial fast-growing medical threat to worldwide health, which erases medical achievements from past decades. Antibiotic resistance occurs because bacteria develop protective mechanisms that disable antibiotic treatments, which subsequently results in premature disease fatalities. Each year antibiotic resistance causes more deaths than HIV/AIDS and malaria combined because it results in 1.27 million worldwide fatalities from resistant infections. Antibiotic-resistant pathogens contribute to more than 2.8 million annual infections together with 35,000 yearly deaths across the United States as well as other nations with high income. The article delivers an extensive analysis of antibiotic resistance worldwide, which includes information about regional patterns and root causes together with key bacterial species. Comprehensive knowledge about the depth and intricacy of resistance as a global health issue enables similar worldwide efforts to reduce resistance while safeguarding public health and maintaining the effectiveness of present and future antimicrobial drugs. In the end, urgent global collaboration is essential to reverse this alarming trend.