HEALTH INTEL: Antibiotic Resistance Trajectory Global antibiotic-resistant infections kill approximately 1.27 million people annually and contribute to 4.95 million deaths, with projections suggesting 10 million annual deaths by 2050 if current trends continue. The crisis stems from overuse in human medicine (accounting for ~70% of antibiotic consumption in some nations) and agricultural practices, where 70-80% of antibiotics in the US are administered to livestock for growth promotion rather than treating disease. Resistance develops when bacteria survive antibiotic exposure and multiply, creating a self-reinforcing cycle—the more antibiotics used, the faster resistance spreads across populations. This matters because we're approaching a post-antibiotic era where routine surgeries, childbirth, and minor infections could become life-threatening, fundamentally undermining modern medicine's foundation and reversing decades of public health gains.