India faces a growing crisis as common infections become increasingly difficult to treat due to widespread antibiotic resistance. A recent ICMR report reveals that widely used drugs are failing ...
New Delhi: India has unveiled its next-generation national action plan on antimicrobial resistance (AMR 2.0) for 2025-2029, to curb misuse of antibiotics across human and animal health as ...
As global economic relationships evolve, Achyuta Adhvaryu, professor of economics at the University of California San Diego ...
An international study has revealed an alarming prevalence of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) among patients in India, raising concerns about the country’s preparedness to deal with infections that no ...
India and large parts of the world are now facing a rising antibiotic resistance or antimicrobial resistance (AMR) crisis. Apart from international bodies like the World Health Organization (WHO) and ...
Superbugs, bacteria that no longer respond to standard antibiotics, aren't just a future threat. They are already here, and India appears to be at the epicentre. A new large-scale, multinational study ...
Temba Bavuma's resistance put India win in doubts: Record chase needed to go 1-0 ahead in the series
India's current target of 124 in the Kolkata Test at Eden Gardens is historically daunting, with only one successful fourth-innings chase over 100 runs. India’s target of 124 in the ongoing Kolkata ...
A new analysis of swab samples taken from patients before endoscopy procedures indicates that nearly 83 per cent of patients in India may be carrying multidrug-resistant organisms. Researchers ...
More than 80 per cent of Indian patients carry multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs) -- the highest globally, according to an alarming study on Tuesday reflecting the deep antibiotic resistance crisis ...
India’s drug-resistant infection rates lower than U.S., Europe despite higher microbial colonisation
The National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has refuted claims made in an international study published by The Lancet that over 50% of Indian patients hospitalised for a specific gastrointestinal ...
Hyderabad: India is facing a "superbug explosion," with 83% of patients walking into hospitals already carrying drug-resistant bacteria, according to a global study led by AIG Hospitals, Hyderabad.
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