1. International cooperation to improve access to and sustain effectiveness of antimicrobials
- Author
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Didier Pittet, Richard D. Smith, Anna Zorzet, John-Arne Røttingen, Osman Dar, Jennifer Cohn, Abdul Ghafur, Nils Daulaire, Chantal M. Morel, Manica Balasegaram, Ramanan Laxminarayan, David L Heymann, Nisha Ranganathan, Kevin Outterson, Marc Mendelson, Mike Sharland, Luke S. P. Moore, Alison Holmes, Zain Rizvi, Christine Årdal, and Steven J. Hoffman
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Infection Control/methods ,Economic policy ,International Cooperation ,030106 microbiology ,Intellectual property ,Collective action ,Health Services Accessibility ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Political agenda ,Anti-Infective Agents/supply & distribution/therapeutic use ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Health policy ,ddc:616 ,Infection Control ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Environmental resource management ,Drug Resistance, Microbial ,General Medicine ,Agriculture ,Population Surveillance ,Health law ,business - Abstract
Securing access to effective antimicrobials is one of the greatest challenges today. Until now, efforts to address this issue have been isolated and uncoordinated, with little focus on sustainable and international solutions. Global collective action is necessary to improve access to life-saving antimicrobials, conserving them, and ensuring continued innovation. Access, conservation, and innovation are beneficial when achieved independently, but much more effective and sustainable if implemented in concert within and across countries. WHO alone will not be able to drive these actions. It will require a multisector response (including the health, agriculture, and veterinary sectors), global coordination, and financing mechanisms with sufficient mandates, authority, resources, and power. Fortunately, securing access to effective antimicrobials has finally gained a place on the global political agenda, and we call on policy makers to develop, endorse, and finance new global institutional arrangements that can ensure robust implementation and bold collective action.
- Published
- 2016
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