Litcius/Paper detail

One Health strategies in combating antimicrobial resistance: a Southeast Asian perspective

Pooi Yin Chung

2025Journal of Global Health13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a multifactorial global public health concern that is interlinked with the health of humans, animals, and the environment. Therapeutically important antibiotics used widely in the mass medication of livestock have contributed significantly to AMR, as they eventually enter the environment due to inadequate treatment of wastewater. Similarly, improper discharge of antibiotic-contaminated waste by the medical sector exacerbates the problem by contributing to the increase in the selection of resistant bacteria and the horizontal transfer of resistance genes. Developed and developing countries and regions worldwide acknowledged that no discipline or sector of society can successfully address climate change, known and emerging infectious diseases, and AMR by acting in isolation. Countries in Southeast Asia, like elsewhere in the world, have also adopted a transdisciplinary and multi-sectoral collaboration integrating human, animal, and environmental health, known as the One Health strategy.

Topics & Concepts

Antibiotic resistanceAntimicrobialPerspective (graphical)MedicineEnvironmental healthIntensive care medicineMicrobiologyBiologyAntibioticsComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceAntibiotic Use and ResistanceZoonotic diseases and public healthVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy