The World Health Organization released a statement this afternoon, prompted by news of the NDM-1 multi-resistance gene. It's worth taking a look: The agency recommends that countries around the world pay serious attention to the emergence of this resistance factor.
WHO calls for broad action within countries, from
hospital infection-control and antibiotic-stewardship programs, to
increased surveillance for the emergence of resistance, to
legislative control of over-the-counter sales. Those sound like (and are) minimal and rational suggestions — but they have the potential to be quite controversial in some countries, from India where OTC antibiotic purchases are a major economic sector, to the US where best practices for hospital control of resistant organisms continue to be, umm, vociferously debated.
The WHO says:
The WHO has been working on antibiotic resistance for a while now, though the effort seems to be continually obscured by urgent news of outbreaks such as SARS, H5N1, H1N1 and so on. Here's their short fact sheet, detailed program page, and Global Strategy for Containment of Antibiotic Resistance (sadly 9 years old, so it predates the emergence of community MRSA, not to mention NDM-1).