The processes involving resistance development against antibiotics have historically been part of the Darwinian evolution. But in the backdrop of this evolutionary reality, the increasing use of antibiotics in modern medicine, particularly in post-penicillin discovery era, has intensified the selection pressures with an acute gear up rather than as part of the so slow and natural evolutionary process that selects for enhanced fitness for survival. Two major recommendations were made in the past years to tackle this challenge: 1) incentivizing the pharmaceutical industry to invest more on research and development endeavors, so that they come up with new and novel antibiotics; 2) implementing antimicrobial stewardship programs in healthcare systems.
In the current study, the third and the emerging approach — the idea of antibiotic footprint — was employed as a communication tool that targets individual consumers of antibiotics to tackle the problems of their misuse and overuse.
A total of 698.2 tons of antibiotics were used in Ethiopia in 2018, and the per capita consumption of antibiotics was 5.8 grams per person. Penicillins with extended spectrum (J01CA) and beta-lactamase-resistant penicillins (J01CF) were the most commonly utilized classes of antibiotics which accounted for, respectively, 38.3% and 20.8% of all antibiotics used in the country’s public health sector. Hubs in Addis Ababa (14%) and Hawassa (12%) topped the overall antibiotic consumptions in the country. Contrarily, hubs in Gambella and Semera received relatively smaller quantities of antibiotics, with totals of 4.8 tons (0.9%) and 10.2 tons (1.9%), respectively.