We're fast approaching a 'post-antibiotics era' and it won't be pretty

Centers For Disease Control CRE Bacteria
Centers For Disease Control CRE Bacteria

(AP Photo/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

The first person to receive penicillin — a powerful antibiotic discovered in 1928 — was a British policeman who had a life-threatening infection.

He'd scratched his face on a thorn while strolling through his garden. The infection caused sores on his scalp to ooze pus; doctors even had to remove one of his eyes.

In a recent TED Talk, Maryn McKenna — a journalist who spent a decade reporting on the CDC and who has authored an award-winning book on the drug-resistant superbug, MRSA — tells this tale to warn against the reality we will face now that, as experts warn, we're fast-approaching a "post-antibiotic era."

Hailed as "miracle drugs" in the 1940s and 1950s, antibiotics turned raging infections — which were once seen as veritable death sentences — into manageable conditions. What killed us in the early 20th century was now easily remedied with a shot or a pill.

But now, bacteria are developing defenses against these potent medicines, rendering them increasingly useless for some types of infections. Doctors try one antibiotic, then a stronger one, and eventually the strongest ones we have — when none of them work, a patient is often out of options.

That means infections that were easily treatable are becoming life-threatening once again.

When it comes down to the warfare between humans and bacterial invaders, we are fighting a losing battle if we aren't armed with effective antibiotics, or at least developing new alternatives. If we don't come up with some innovative strategies and new solutions quickly, everyone around the globe will be affected. Millions already are.

The "golden age" of antibiotics is coming to an end, and it's not going to be pretty. "Antibiotics support almost all of modern life," McKenna says in her talk. Here is what she warns we'll lose when they stop working.

Minor infections will be something to fear.

kid scrape
kid scrape

(Flickr/Jesse Millan) Even minor cuts and scrapes could cause life-threatening infections.

As with the British policeman, everything from a scratch to catching a cold could kill before antibiotics were introduced. Strep throat led to heart failure. Simple cuts and scrapes induced raging infections requiring amputations.

The simple fact is that bacteria — from innocuous ones that we don't even notice are there, to those that help us digest nutrients from food and even those that cause us harm — are everywhere. There's no avoiding them, and if we're left with nothing that can effectively fight them off, risks that are now considered minor ones will suddenly loom large.