Rethinking Antibiotic Research and Development
World War II and the Penicillin Collaborative
Roswell Quinn
2013
Abstract
Policy leaders and public health experts may be overlooking effective ways to stimulate innovative antibiotic research and development. I analyzed archival resources concerning the US government’s efforts to produce penicillin during World War II, which demonstrate how much science policy can differ from present approaches. By contrast to current attempts to invigorate commercial participation in antibiotic development, the effort to develop the first commercially produced antibiotic did not rely on economic enticements or the further privatization of scientific resources. Rather, this extremely successful scientific and, ultimately, commercial endeavor was rooted in government stewardship, intraindustry cooperation, and the open exchange of scientific information. For policymakers facing the problem of stimulating antibiotic research and development, the origins of the antibiotic era offer a template for effective policy solutions that concentrate primarily on scientific rather than commercial goals.
Commentary
The latest commentary on the use of antimicrobials in society.
Welcome to the AMIS Hub!
The story of ‘How do we get patients to stop demanding antibiotics?' to where we are now.
The Third Man: How are we entwined with...
A film event and panel discussion for World Antibiotics Awareness Week 2017
Drugs, Bugs and our Precarious Existence
This weekend I had the privilege of engaging with Laura Piddock and Ed Whiting and members of the public at...