BEIJING, Jan. 9 (Xinhua) -- China's health authorities have launched a
program to train up to 45,000 doctors nationwide in an effort to curb the abuse
of antibiotics at public hospitals.
The two-year program was jointly launched Friday by the Health Ministry,
the China Licensed Pharmacists' Association and Pfizer Pharmaceuticals.
Experts from a committee on the rational use of drugs under the ministry
would train health workers in medical facilities at or below county level across
the country.
"The program will aim to step up the management of anti-bacteria medicine
classification, slow the increase in drug-resistance, and ultimately realize the
safe, effective and economic use of antibiotics," said ministry spokesman Zhao
Minggang.
The irrational use of antibiotics was a major problem in China, in rural
hospitals in particular, said Zhao. "Abuse of antibiotics leads to extra medical
spending of 80 billion yuan (11.7 billion U.S. dollars) across the country and
about 30 percent patients take them as a panacea."
Bacterium were becoming increasingly more drug-resistant, he said. The 2007
World Health Report had said it was a serious problem that jeopardized human
safety.
Zhang Shufang, an expert from the committee, warned of the exhaustion of
antibiotics if no effective measures were taken.
She said the rational use of antibiotics would help increase drug use
safety, lower medical costs for patients and allow drug makers more time to
research their products.