HEALTH INTEL: The Silent Rise of Antimicrobial Resistance Since Fleming's 1928 penicillin discovery, antibiotics have prevented an estimated 200+ million deaths globally, yet we're now seeing the emergence of multidrug-resistant pathogens that don't respond to our most powerful drugs. The CDC reports that antibiotic-resistant infections cause 2.8 million illnesses and 35,000 deaths annually in the US alone, with the World Health Organization ranking antimicrobial resistance as a top-10 global public health threat. This crisis stems from overuse in medicine and livestock farming—roughly 70% of antibiotics in the US go to animal agriculture—creating evolutionary pressure for resistant strains. If current trajectories continue unchecked, resistant infections could push global healthcare costs beyond $100 trillion by 2050 and deaths could exceed 10 million annually, potentially erasing decades of medical progress.