Jim O'Neill, Columnist

China Can Lead the Fight on Superbugs

By 2050, more people could be dying because of antibiotic resistance than cancer.

We're taking too many antibiotics.

Photographer: JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images
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One of the most potent threats to global economic prosperity is too little discussed. Resistance to antibiotics, caused in large part by overuse and misuse, is already well established and recognized by specialists as a problem -- but it doesn't yet frighten the public. It should.

I've been looking into the issue closely since I was appointed chairman of a review into antimicrobial resistance (AMR) by the U.K. government. We've just published some interim findings -- and I have to tell you, I'm alarmed. This danger needs to sink in. The scale of the problem, left unattended, is truly unsettling.