Prescription for Disaster

Antibiotics have saved untold millions of lives, but bacteria are learning to outsmart them at alarming rates. Projections show that by 2050, ten million people could die each year from antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

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Host
  • Gabrielle Sierra
    Director, Podcasting
Credits

Asher Ross - Supervising Producer

Markus Zakaria - Audio Producer and Sound Designer

Rafaela Siewert - Associate Podcast Producer

Episode Guests
  • Kathy Talkington
    Director of the Antibiotic Resistance Project, The Pew Charitable Trusts
  • Michael J. Satlin
    Assistant Professor of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine

Show Notes

Bacteria are becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics. A major cause is their overuse in both humans and animals. At the same time, a lack of financial incentives is setting back efforts to discover new classes of antibiotics. The problem is both global and local, and without new initiatives, many common medical conditions could become deadly once again.

 

From CFR

 

The End of Antibiotics?,” Claire Felter

 

Antibiotic-Resistant ‘Superbugs’ Are Here,” Laurie Garrett and Ramanan Laxminarayan

 

Read More

 

The post-antibiotic era is here,” Vox

 

The Future of Chicken, Without Antibiotics,” Atlantic

 

U.N. Issues Urgent Warning on the Growing Peril of Drug-Resistant Infections,” New York Times

 

Are Antibiotics Damaging Your Family’s Health?,” Scientific American

 

Watch or Listen

 

We’re Losing the War Against Bacteria, Here’s Why,” New York Times

 

A Superbug Survivor Shares His Struggle with Antibiotic Resistance,” Pew Charitable Trusts

 

The Antibiotic Apocalypse Explained,” Kurzgesagt

 

 The Rise of the Superbug,” Al Jazeera

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Thirty years ago, Rwanda’s government began a campaign to eradicate the country’s largest minority group. In just one hundred days in 1994, roving militias killed around eight hundred thousand people. Would-be killers were incited to violence by the radio, which encouraged extremists to take to the streets with machetes. The United Nations stood by amid the bloodshed, and many foreign governments, including the United States, declined to intervene before it was too late. What got in the way of humanitarian intervention? And as violent conflict now rages at a clip unseen since then, can the international community learn from the mistakes of its past?