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Tackling Antibiotic Resistance for Greater Global Health Security
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Tue, 2013-10-01 22:01 — Kathy Gilbeaux
chathamhouse.org - Gemma L. Buckland Merrett, October 2013
DOWNLOAD PAPER HERE (16 page .PDF file)
- Antibiotic resistance is now recognized as a major global health security issue that threatens a return to the pre-antibiotic era, with potentially catastrophic economic, social and political ramifications. An extra burden is likely to hit resource-poor countries.
- Although bacteria naturally adapt to outsmart antibiotics, human actions accelerate the development and spread of resistance.
- Antibiotics need to be used judiciously, with effective stewardship and infection prevention and control, and a harmonized approach to their use in animal and human health should be fostered. There is also a need for practical economic models to develop new products that avoid rewarding researchers for what they do already.
- Choosing the right paradigms for sustainably stimulating R&D requires new measures to align the financial incentives for drug and diagnostic test development with public health needs. Incentives for infection control and appropriate stewardship are equally important.
- Integrated efforts involving academia, policy-makers, industry and interest groups will be required to produce a global political response with strong leadership, based on a coherent set of priorities and actions.
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