- A: The passage states hypermutators exist due to antibiotic pressure but does not explicitly say antibiotics do more harm than good. Instead, antibiotics saved many lives; the issue is resistance development, not harm from antibiotics themselves. So A is not necessarily agreed on.
- B: The passage mentions that antibiotic use and presence of pharmaceuticals in sewage may contribute to resistance-essentially, using antibiotics (a health measure) can lead to resistance (a threat). So this suggests some health measures may threaten health, supporting $B$.
- C: The passage explicitly says pharmaceuticals from treated humans and animals contribute to increasing resistant pathogens. So C is clearly supported.
I think that also C is supported
Quote:
The industrial production of penicillin in 1940 and the subsequent introduction of new antibiotics into medical application saved many lives and raised hopes for permanent control of pathogens. However, the continuous and increasing use of antibiotics led to the emergence of pathogenic bacteria resistant to many of these anti-infectiva. During antibiotic treatment, these resistances are probably generated by hypermutating strains