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Scientists look to honey as an antibiotic alternative

As antibiotic-resistant infections continue to surge, scientists have been looking at honey’s natural healing properties in their search for alternative antimicrobial drugs.

More than 1.2 million people died around the world in 2019 as a result of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections, according to the medical journal Lancet.

Bacteria’s increasing resistance to antibiotics threatens a return to a” pre-antibiotic stage,” posing a huge threat to global health and security.

Prof Les Baillie from Cardiff University’s School of Pharmacy said: “We’re seeing bacteria that has evolved, that is resistant to almost all antibiotics, and we are reaching the stage where the cupboard is empty.”

Speaking to the BBC, the professor added that the university’s research into honey is a bid to return to traditional remedies “to see if we can learn from our ancestors”.

Honey contains antibiotics and has been used for centuries as a natural remedy to combat several types of illnesses and treat wounds.

According to Cardiff University, it “possesses therapeutic properties which are the result of a range of factors including high sugar content, low pH, hydrogen peroxide and bee-derived peptides.

“Honey also contains antimicrobial phytochemicals which represent a rich source of leads for the development of drugs for the treatment of microbial infections.”

Scientists at Cardiff University are attempting to find these antimicrobial compounds and isolate them.

In their research, the scientists have also analysed the compounds of dandelions closely as they have the potential to “kill bacteria and viruses,” according to Prof Baillie.

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