Hospital Horror
Sardar, Ziauddin
New Statesman
Number: 585
ISSN: 13647431
Publication Date:
Our hospitals are becoming hazardous
places. One can go in with a curable illness and come out with an incurable
one. The risk of being infected by a "superbug", bacterial infection
that is resistant to antibiotic, is very real. It has always been possible to
die from surgical infection, but the arrival of superbugs has increased this
risk enormously. Within ten years most of these infections will not be
treatable with antibiotics.
This crisis is solely due to over-use of antibiotics. We use antibiotics as a
panacea for all illnesses, and doctors have become accustomed to prescribing
them as blanket coverage for all complaints. Patients, too, think antibiotics
are magic bullets and demand them for every flu of every season. Worse, we use
antibacterial agents in household products such as washing-up liquid, bin
liners and kitchen utensils. A recent essay in Nature shows how this domestic
overuse is leading to resistant bacteria. For example, E coli, one of the most
common causes of food poisoning, is developing resistance to triclosan, a
common antibacterial agent.
That is the bad news. The good news is that there is a relatively safe and easy
cure for drug-resistant strains of infectious bacteria. It's called phage
therapy. Bacteriophage, or "bacteria eaters", are viruses extracted
from raw sewage. They thrive wherever bacteria thrive - in our bodies, waste products,
rivers. Phage therapy has been freely available in the former communist world
for decades. Even now, a dilapidated factory in
Why didn't we know this before? Why has no research been done in the west on
bacteriophage? And what does this tell us about the way science is governed?
The history of bacteriophage reads like a thriller. It starts a century ago
with some "local knowledge" in
Those who remember Sinclair Lewis's classic novel Arrowsmith will recall that
the hero worked on "phage". It was popular in the twenties. But
d'Herelle could not control the quality ofproduction and of clinical
applications. So the American Medical Association rubbished d'Herelle's work on
the effects of bacteriophage as "contradictory". When antibiotics
were introduced after the second world war, there was little motivation to look
for anything else.
But it was different in the east. George Eliava, a microbiologist, noticed that
rivers in
It took a long time for the west to recover from its infatuation with
"magic bullets", including broad-spectrum antibiotics. There were two
main reasons why phage therapy was seen as inferior for so long. First, it was
a product of "eastern" research, conventionally seen as inferior to
western science. Second, each bacteriophage can act only on one specific host,
seen as a limitation compared with antibiotics which kill everything in their
path.
With superbugs now running rampant, the advantages of bacteriophage are clear.
They kill the bacteria responsible for the diseases and do not simultaneously
kill most of the body's normal, helpful bacteria. They replicate at the place
in the body where they are needed. And they can multiply from one to tens of
billions in a few hours. Most important, while bacteria can evolve resistance
to antibiotics, they cannot do so to phages: the viruses evolve along with
them.
Phage therapy is a good example of issues now arising over the governance of
science. We are becoming aware that big, expensive science cannot solve all our
problems; indeed, it can create new ones. It is relatively easy to advance
knowledge; but it is also easy to create ignorance. The work in developing new
broad-spectrum antibiotics may be excellent, but it has to be seen in the
context of the research that is not done on assimilating and adapting existing
work on bacteriophages.
Excellent science has always been done outside the west, though we have often
been blind to it. The problem is that when it is recognised, big business often
reaps the benefits. In
The case of bacteriophage can be read as a modem parable of science and humanity.
On the positive side, we find respect for local knowledge and heroic endeavours
for science and healing. On the negative side, there is state political terror,
pride, greed and private corporate piracy. Will their superbugs' superbugs be
properly enlisted to fight our superbugs? That depends on the coming political
struggles for the governance, and soul, of science.
Author Affiliation
ZIAUDDIN SARDAR on an eastern therapy to challenge superbugs
Copyright New Statesman Ltd.
Page: 45
Type: Periodical
Language: English