It is gradually happening Shaker, I have seen a great difference in the treatment of farm animals over the past years, since going to Norfolk regularly. Poultry too, thank God. The pigs now root around in fields and have their own little huts. Cattle is treated with some respect. Still a way to go of course but we're getting there.
We all need to be a bit more careful but when an infection is resistant to an antibiotic, other antibiotics are tried and generally the infection clears up. The ones given in the first instance are the ones most commonly used, after that a less commonly prescribed antibiotic is administered. Plus other treatment because antibiotics are not the only things to counter infection.
Every so often there is a scare about antibiotic-resistant infection and then we hear no more of it, because it's sorted. Of course we know that they are over prescribed but most of us would not be alive today without them.
The trouble with this is that certain infections are increasingly resistant to many antibiotics so that only one or two antibiotics have any potency against them, and if the bacterial infections develop a resistance to these, then the cupboard is bare. Remember, no new class of antibiotics has been discovered since the 1980s. In such situations our only answers are those from the pre-antibiotic era and a much greater reliance on a person's immune system, both of which do not compare in their effectiveness with the sensible use of antibiotics, especially in extreme cases.
Unfortunately the overuse of antibiotics has caused other problems, as with the infection c difficile which resides in the gut and usually causes no harm. But, especially in hospitals, it has become a major problem because antibiotics used to treat other infections also kill bacteria which keeps the infection c difficile in check. That is why there has been a rapid increase in the spread of virulent strains of c difficile in hospitals. One of the ways in which one can control this distressing infection is absolute cleanliness as regards both personal and hospital hygiene as the infection is present in the stools of the patient.
I have to disagree with you that scare stories about antibiotic-resistant infections disappearing from media headlines means that they have been sorted. It is usually the case that the media have simply moved on to other stories. For instance, the Lancet reported in 2015 that more than 6000 deaths in the US could be caused by a 30% fall in the effectiveness of antibiotics. The same report suggested that as many as half of all bacteria that cause infections after surgery are resistant to antibiotics in the US. As far as I know, this hasn't gone away, even though the media has lost interest in such stories.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancetid/article/PIIS1473-3099(15)00270-4/abstractOr take this story from the Guardian about the antibiotic resistant superbug MRSA in pig products, especially those from animals incubated in industrial livestock units.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jun/18/mrsa-pork-responsible-farming-superbug-antibiotics-farms-meatAs far as I know, nothing has really changed. It hasn't been 'sorted'. It's just not in the headlines at the moment.
My wife was a lay member of the Health Protection Agency and she assures me that it constantly paid attention to the indiscriminate use of antibiotics by patients, doctors and hospitals because of the very real dangers associated with the evolving strains of antibiotic resistant bacteria. Of course antibiotics save lives and some of us would not be alive today without them. That seems to me a very good reason to treat them with very great care, and heed the warnings that many in the medical profession give about their indiscriminate use.