Antibiotics Pollution Index 11 Sep 2017

The Index

For each antibiotic that pollutes the environment, this Index estimates its impact on consumer safety from none (1) to severe (1000). It takes the following 5 factors into account:

  1. Polluted sites, identified by SquaredAnt
  2. Pollution in food
  3. Resistance against this antibiotic
  4. Placed on the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines
  5. Incorrect use: Public Demand to obtain this antibiotic without prescription on the web (in English)

What can I do with the Index?

Consumers

Find out the Index for your antibiotic. If it is high, this drug is likely on its way out, and the world may loose an important cure for your disease, unless we reduce it’s usage and pollution levels in the pharmaceutical, agricultural and (health-)care industries.

Follow your physician’s advice, but don’t forget to confirm that:

a/ without antibiotics, you would be at risk;
b/ without antibiotics, you will not get better.

Dispose of the remains responsibly and never keep antibiotics to self-medicate.

Professionals

Health care providers and veterinarians

Use the Index as an entry point for improving the sustainable use of antibiotics in your practice and to inform your patients and clients on risks associated to irrational use of antibiotics.

Public Health professionals and NGOs

Your policy advice and/or implementation could benefit from data behind the Index, which contian more detailed insights of the factors involved. Please get in touch via LinkedIn to see how we can support you.

My antibiotic is not on the list. What does it mean?

SquaredAnt looks for antibiotics in the environment. Only those that are identified are indexed. For now, we only use academic publications as a resource. If your antibiotic is not on the list, it means that no publications have been processed that mention this antibiotic.

Leader of the pack

Currently, Tetracycline has the highest Index. SquaredAnt has found

  • evidence for pollution on 17 locations globally;
  • 60 publications that link to pollution of food;
  • thousands of publications that link to resistance;
  • it is present on the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines;
  • tens of thousands posts on-line, that request and/or offer this drug.

The List.
Updated on 11 September 2017.

Antibiotic Index
Tetracycline

857

Ampicillin

686

Chloramphenicol

623

Sulfamethoxazole

563

Amoxicillin

538

Trimethoprim

526

Ciprofloxacin

521

Erythromycin

422

Ofloxacin

409

Clindamycin

407

Metronidazole

400

Doxycycline

387

Fluconazole

380

Sulfadiazine

370

Piperacillin

361

Cefazolin

321

Sulfadoxin

316

Sulfadimidine

299

Cephalexin

260

Norfloxacin

247

Cefotaxime

236

Clarithromycin

234

Levofloxacin

217

Azithromycin

205

Oxytetracycline

189

Moxifloxacin

172

Nalidixic acid

136

Chlortetracycline

129

Sulfamethazine

93

Roxithromycin

83

Cefuroxime

80

Lincomycin

78

Enrofloxacin

76

Sulfadimethoxine

73

Tylosin

71

Florfenicol

67

Flumequine

66

Sulfamonomethoxine

61

Oxolinic acid

55

Sulfaclozine

53

Sarafloxacin

52

Sulfameter

51

Pefloxacin

50

Lomefloxacin

49

Sulfachinoxlin

48

Sulfapyridine

46

Sulfathiazole

44

Marbofloxacin

44

Enoxacin

44

Sulfamethoxydiazine

43

Sulfachloropyridazine

41

Difloxacin

40

Sulfamerazine

40

Sulfametoxazole

39

Sulfamethizole

38

Sulfaquinoxaline

37

Pipedimic acid

37

Sulfacetamide

35

Enfloxacin

35

Sulfachinoxalin

34

Disclaimer
The Antibiotics Pollution Index is an initiative of SquaredAnt and intended to generate awareness on the risks of uncontrolled exposure to antibiotics. SquaredAnt does not accept responsibility for any damage through the use or interpretation of the Index, and no rights may be derived from its contents.

History
This is the earliest publication of the Index.