- economic impact
- incidence
- 10-year projection of incidence
- transmissibility
- availability of effective antibiotics
- barriers to prevention
 The assessment was focused on domestic impact, but the threat of importing
 international antibiotic-resistant pathogens was taken into account in the 10-year
 incidence projection. Because antibiotic resistance is a rapidly evolving problem, this
 assessment will be revised at least every five years. Examples of findings that could
 result in a change in threat status are:- Multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR and XDR
 TB) infections are an increasing threat outside of the United States. In the United
 States, infections are uncommon because a robust prevention and control
 program is in place. If infection rates of MDR and XDR TB increase within the
 U.S., this antibiotic-resistant threat will change from serious to urgent, because it
 is transmissible through respiratory secretions, and because treatment options are
 very limited.
- MRSA infections can be very serious and the number of infections is among the
 highest of all antibiotic-resistant threats. However, the number of serious
 infections is decreasing and there are multiple effective antibiotics for treating
 infections. If MRSA infection rates increase or MRSA strains become more
 resistant to other antibiotic agents, then MRSA may change from a serious to an
 urgent threat.
- Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) can cause serious and sometimes
 life-threatening infections. Antibiotic resistance significantly affects the ability to
 manage these infections. A new version of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
 (PCV13), introduced in 2010, protects against infections with the most resistant
 pneumococcus strains and rates of resistant infections are declining. The extent
 to which this trend will continue is unknown, but a significant and sustainable
 drop in resistant infection rates could result in this threat being recategorized as
 concerning.
 
 
 
 
 
 
- Multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR and XDR
                    
                      nancy kaufman
                      (Nancy Kaufman)
                      
                    
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