HEALTH INTEL: Antibiotic Resistance Acceleration The global antibiotic resistance crisis is accelerating faster than predicted. Overuse in agriculture accounts for 70% of antibiotic consumption in the US, yet only 13% of Americans are aware of this connection. Since Fleming's penicillin discovery in 1928, bacteria have evolved resistance mechanisms at an exponential rate—what took decades in the 1980s now happens in years. This matters because by 2050, antibiotic-resistant infections could cause 10 million deaths annually (exceeding cancer mortality), collapse modern surgery and chemotherapy protocols that depend on infection prevention, and potentially return infectious disease to pre-antibiotic era mortality rates unless agricultural use is restricted and stewardship protocols are implemented globally.