Antibiotic resistance has received much attention, and the latest research at the University of Hong Kong Medical College found that a super bacteria "carbonicohrine enterulobacillus" (CPE) infection rate that can resist multiple antibiotics (CPE)Nearly 40 times, experts called on citizens not to abuse antibiotics.

According to the Hong Kong News Agency, the research team of the University of Hong Kong Medical College analyzed the clinical data of the Medical Management Bureau and found that the CPE infection rate rose from 0.04 per 10,000 in 2015 to rose to per 10,000 people in 2019.There were 1.62 pieces, an increase of 39.5 times.

The patient will have urethritis and urinary red pain after infection with CPE. Severe cases can cause sepsis.The CPE infection channels are not yet determined, and CPE can resist a variety of antibiotics, and there are very few drugs for treatment.

Xu Shiling, assistant professor of the School of Nursing and the School of Public Health of the University of Hong Kong Medical College, said that this super bacteria is common in human intestines and is particularly common in summer.She suggested that officials need to create a monitoring system, predict the incidence and other information from big data, and plan to deploy plans.

Research also found that β-lactamic antibiotics such as carbonicoin or penicillin can increase the risk of infection CPE by 37%.

Xu Shiling said that bacteria will inevitably develop resistance, but reducing abuse can win new medicines.

Wu Peng, an assistant professor at the School of Public Health and Biological Statistics of the School of Public Health of the University of Hong Kong Medical College, called for citizens not to take the initiative to ask doctors to open antibiotics, let alone buy them by themselves.

She believes that drug education needs to be strengthened, so that patients can understand that mild infections may not need to use antibiotics, because they have the opportunity to kill the intestinal "good bacteria" and oppose health.