Why is the environmental impact of Pruex so important in the fight against AMR?

Resistant bacteria or antimicrobial resistance (AMR) from human sludge, slurry, muck, and landfill are polluting our waterways, contaminating our land, and infecting our wildlife. As resistant bacteria increasingly dominate wildlife and their environments, the rate at which they spread and become more prevalent accelerates.

 

The Guardian newspaper in the United Kingdom have just highlighted some research illustrating the scale of the current problem. 

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/aug/13/urban-birds-are-teeming-with-antibiotic-resistant-bacteria-study-finds

Pruex has the answer:


We can alter the bacterial composition of human sludge, slurry, and muck to contain non-infective types. Our work in agriculture, as well as in human and non-food animal markets, helps reduce pollution from gases and reactive mineral leaching into waterways. By shifting the bacterial makeup of faecal waste products from being dominated by pathogenic, pollutive, and resistant bacteria to non-infective strains, we can keep animals healthy, minimise pollution, and slow the progression of antimicrobial resistance (AMR).

Pruex aims to lead the fight against AMR and environmental pollution. Please help us.