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Jakarta Post

Just say no to (prescribed) drugs

Public health: The World Health Organization urged Southeast Asian nations to boost plans to combat the rapidly increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistance that will be devastating in an age of emerging infectious diseases

Duncan Graham (The Jakarta Post)
Malang, East Java
Wed, December 10, 2014

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Just say no to (prescribed) drugs

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span class="inline inline-center">Public health: The World Health Organization urged Southeast Asian nations to boost plans to combat the rapidly increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistance that will be devastating in an age of emerging infectious diseases. AFP/Alberto E. Rodriguez

Seven years ago, Dutch microbiologist Henri Verbrugh wrote a letter to a newspaper that was critical of medical prescription practices. By the normally restrained standards of professional intercourse it was blunt.

'€œIt is perhaps not polite to be critical of my hosts,'€ Verbrugh said in the letter. '€œBut in the large majority of the cases presented to me antibiotics were used irrationally ['€¦] doctors in general have only marginal knowledge about antibiotics.

'€œA study of 4,000 patients and their relatives in Semarang and Surabaya found most of the antibiotics were prescribed without proper indication.'€

Jump to the present. '€œMy comments did attract some attention,'€ Verbrugh said wryly during a return visit to attend conferences and deliver lectures at medical schools, including Malang'€™s Brawijaya University.

'€œThere was some blushing, but overall the letter was accepted readily enough.'€

Other critics might not have fared so well. A citizen of a former colonial power jabbing the needle into local nerves? Send him back! Who does he think he is?

Fortunately this fault-finder was well armored against the barbs. The descendant of an Indonesian grandmother and son of a mining company doctor, young Henri once lived in Belitung, also known as Billiton.

The islands off Sumatra'€™s east coast were the lad'€™s playground from his birth in 1949 until 1958, when President Sukarno ordered the Dutch to begone or become Indonesian citizens.

The family chose the first option and left for The Netherlands, where Verbrugh is now a leading scientist, head of the Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases at Rotterdam'€™s Erasmus Medical Center.

He is also an advisor to the Scientific Program Indonesia-Netherlands (SPIN), a long-term joint collaboration project to boost scholarly inquiry in Indonesia, which has fallen behind nations such as Iran and Egypt in publishing scientific research.

Verbrugh'€™s words may have wrinkled brows, but there'€™s no doubt he had the qualifications to comment, a right he'€™s still exercising.

'€œAntibiotics are very useful drugs, but they have to be used cautiously,'€ he said. '€œMicrobes adjust and adapt quickly and soon produce drug-resistant strains of bacteria. These are much harder to treat.

'€œThe situation has improved since I wrote that letter, and there are protocols on antibiotic use in the government hospitals, though not all private hospitals follow these.

'€œThere'€™s still a lack of collaboration among many doctors and administrators who continue doing things their way. Indonesia is an archipelago of medical kingdoms.

'€œI tell students this has to stop and they should work together. They also need to be disobedient and not accept what they'€™re told without questioning.'€

His comments are not a lone cry. In November, the World Health Organization (WHO) urged Southeast Asian nations to boost plans to combat the '€œrapidly increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistance ['€¦] that will be devastating in this age of emerging infectious diseases.'€

So how can we stay well without resorting to antibiotics?

'€œThe problem is not the drugs but the way they are being used; sometimes we need to get back to basics, like washing with disinfectant soap,'€ Verbrugh said, advice which must send the drug companies feverish.

'€œJust screening out patients from surgery if they are carrying heavy loads of bacteria drops hospital infections significantly. So does nasal cream (the nose harbors bacteria) and antiseptic baths.

'€œReducing the use of antibiotics also brings down costs to the health system.'€

Apart from educating doctors about the danger of shooting up antibiotics first and asking questions later, the public also has to be alerted, Verbrugh said.

Questioning treatment is never easy when feeling unwell; in a culture where doctors are often seen as gods it takes a courageous patient to challenge a physician.

Overseas governments, particularly those with national health schemes, restrict the right to authorize certain medicines to specialists. In Indonesia the public can treat themselves by buying antibiotics over the counter.

Verbrugh alleged that some Indonesian doctors routinely include antibiotics as treatment for dengue fever, and for newborns who appear to be having breathing problems, when these responses were unnecessary. There were also links between doctors and drug companies seeking to promote their products, he said.

Indonesian doctors told him they use antibiotics as a preventative measure because they fear disease, even when patients are suffering from viruses that antibiotics can'€™t kill.

'€œGetting out of these habits may take a while, but I have positive feelings,'€ he said. '€œWe must focus on the next generation of doctors '€” they have to clean up the mess we'€™ve made.'€

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