“From the 1950s through the 1990s,” he says, “roughly three antibiotics were introduced into the U.S. every year. Today it’s roughly one new antibiotic every other year. The rate of antibiotic withdrawals—because they don’t work anymore or have become obsolete—is twice the rate of new introductions. The obvious consequence of this is that the arsenal of drugs we have to treat bacterial infections has been going down. There is no sign of it stopping.” What makes this much worse is that a great deal of our antibiotic use is simply crazy. Almost three-quarters of the forty million antibiotic
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