Newborns are colonized with antibiotic resistant bacteria

Babies in Nigeria are testing positive for bacteria resistant to colistin, though it's not clear whether they pick it up in utero, from their mothers, or from somewhere in the hospital.

A Black woman holds a baby close to her chest
Babies born with colistin-resistant bacteria may have a higher chance of acquiring future drug-resistant infections.
(Image credit: Kelvin Murray via Getty Images)

Sepsis occurs when one's immune system has an extreme response to an infection. It’s a life-threatening condition: globally, it accounts for about 11 million deaths — 20% of all deaths per year.

And it doesn't just affect adults. In 2020, 2.4 million newborn babies died of sepsis in the first month of their lives. Most of these deaths happened in sub-Saharan Africa.

Kirsty Sands
Scientific Lead, Global Surveillance of Antimicrobial Resistance Research, University of Oxford