Litcius/Paper detail

Antimicrobial resistance and the great divide: inequity in priorities and agendas between the Global North and the Global South threatens global mitigation of antimicrobial resistance

Marc Mendelson, Ramanan Laxminarayan, Direk Limmathurotsakul, Samuel Kariuki, Martha Gyansa‐Lutterodt, Esmita Charani, Sanjeev Singh, Kāmini Walia, Ana Cristina Gales, Mirfin Mpundu

2024The Lancet Global Health80 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To limit the catastrophic effects of the increasing bacterial resistance to antimicrobials on health, food, environmental, and geopolitical security, and ensure that no country or region is left behind, a coordinated global approach is required. In this Viewpoint, we argue that the diverging resource availabilities, needs, and priorities of the Global North and the Global South in terms of the actions required to mitigate the antimicrobial resistance pandemic are a direct threat to success. We argue that evidence suggests a need to prioritise and support infection prevention interventions (ie, clean water and safe sanitation, increased vaccine coverage, and enhanced infection prevention measures for food production in the Global South contrary to the focus on research and development of new antibiotics in the Global North) and to recalibrate global funding resources to address this need. We call on global leaders to redress the current response, which threatens mitigation of the antimicrobial resistance pandemic.

Topics & Concepts

SanitationAntibiotic resistanceGlobal healthGeopoliticsRedressPandemicFood securityDevelopment economicsEconomic growthPsychological interventionPolitical scienceEnvironmental healthBusinessEconomicsMedicineBiologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)AntibioticsHealth careAgriculturePoliticsEcologyLawPathologyMicrobiologyPsychiatryDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Antibiotic Use and ResistanceVibrio bacteria research studiesGlobal Maternal and Child Health