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William champions appeal to build centre tackling antimicrobial resistance


By PA News

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The Prince of Wales has committed himself to a five-year project to create a new centre which aims to combat the global rise of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections.

William has become patron of an appeal to build the Fleming Centre, named after Sir Alexander Fleming who discovered penicillin, with the facility due to open in 2028, the centenary year of the microbiologist’s breakthrough.

It will be based at St Mary’s Hospital in central London where Sir Alexander first noticed the ability of a stray mould on a culture dish to ward off bacteria, a development which brought a sea-change in the treatment of bacterial infections.

Sir Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin (Science & Society Picture Library)
Sir Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin (Science & Society Picture Library)

The prince was asked to be the appeal’s patron by Professor Lord Darzi, who will be the chairman of the new centre, which aims to combine cutting edge research, public engagement, and work with policy makers to drive global change on the issue.

The topic is said to be something William is very interested in and his new patronage sits alongside his role as president of the cancer specialist hospital the Royal Marsden, where Lord Darzi holds the post of honorary consultant surgeon.

Lord Darzi said: “At the Fleming Centre, Imperial College London and Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust are driving solutions to antimicrobial resistance that are co-designed with patients, the public and policy makers and underpinned by a rich and diverse evidence base.

“We are making behavioural science and public involvement the cornerstones of the radical change that’s needed to influence individual behaviour and policy decisions.”

In the past decades scientists have become increasingly concerned about the rise of antimicrobial resistance, an urgent global public health threat that occurs when micro-organisms which cause infections develop resistance to treatments like antibiotics, leading to an increase in drug-resistant infections.

It has been caused in part by the widespread misuse and overuse of antibiotics and other antimicrobials in humans and livestock, which has led to the global spread of drug-resistant microbes.

The project is being led by Imperial College London and Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, which includes St Mary’s Hospital.

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organisation, said: “Alexander Fleming’s discovery of penicillin in 1928 completely changed the face of medicine, making previously lethal infections treatable and saving countless lives.

“Nearly a century later, the tide of antimicrobial resistance is eroding those gains and putting a hundred years of medical progress at risk.

“To protect future generations everywhere from potentially life-threatening infections, there is a vital need for transformative research and education to change prescribing practices and identify new antibiotics.”

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