The NHS spends over seventeen billion pounds a year on medications
Types of medications
Those that relieve the symptoms of diseases
Those that help treat the disease
Medications that relieve symptoms
They don't actually help cure the problem, they just reduce the symptoms
Medications that help treat the disease
Antibiotics
Antibiotics
They can directly kill bacteria or prevent the growth of new bacteria
Antibiotics don't work on viruses
Antibiotics are made to interfere with bacteria
They can't do anything to viruses
Antibiotics could kill viruses
They can't find them because viruses hide within our body's cells
There are loads of different antibiotics and each one can only kill certain types of bacteria
Antibiotic resistance is where bacteria become resistant to antibiotics, meaning we can't use the same antibiotics to treat those bacteria anymore
Our ability to treat both the symptoms of a disease and the disease itself has revolutionized medicine, both in terms of improving people's quality of life and extending their lives
Loads of people are now being treated with multiple drugs at once, with some making them feel better while other drugs help to fix the root causes of their diseases
Microorganisms and plants have been evolving for millions of years and along the way they've evolved to produce a range of substances that are able to do all sorts of things including killing pathogens
Instead of having to develop all of our drugs from scratch we've been able to take these substances from them and either use them directly as medicines or sometimes modify them in a lab of it first and then use them as medicines
Substances taken from nature and used as medicines
Aspirin (from willow tree bark)
Digitalis (from foxglove plants)
Penicillin (from Penicillium fungus)
Efficacy
How well the drug works, e.g. how good is an antibiotic at killing bacteria or how well does a pain relief medication reduce your pain
Toxicity
How harmful the drug is, e.g. does it damage our cells or have any side effects
Dosage
How much of the drug or what concentration of the drug should be given
Drug testing stages
1. Testing on human cells and tissues (pre-clinical)
2. Testing on live animals (pre-clinical)
3. Clinical testing on healthy volunteers (starting with low dose)
4. Clinical testing on people with the target illness (finding optimum dose)
Clinical trials
Blind (volunteers don't know if they have real drug or placebo)
Double-blind (neither volunteers nor doctors know who has real drug)
The purpose of blind and double-blind trials is to avoid any unconscious bias
Peer review, where the drug testing is analyzed by other scientists, is central to all of science and helps to prevent false claims or results from getting published