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Increasing Globalization and the Movement of Antimicrobial Resistance between Countries

Allison E. Berndtson

2020Surgical Infections32 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: The threat of antimicrobial resistance continues to grow worldwide, exacerbated by poor antibiotic stewardship practices, limited development of new antimicrobial agents, and increasing globalization. Methods: This review covers previously published studies examining how human movement contributes to the global spread of antimicrobial resistance, including between low- and middle-income and high-income countries. Results: The emergence of resistance in one country or part of the world can become a worldwide event quickly. Human movement, including travel, medical tourism, military service, and migration, results in the globalization of resistant bacterial strains. Conclusions: Increased surveillance, whole-genome sequencing, focused infection control, and effective stewardship practices are needed to maintain the efficacy of antibiotics.

Topics & Concepts

Antimicrobial stewardshipAntibiotic resistanceGlobalizationMedicineStewardship (theology)Resistance (ecology)AntimicrobialTourismAntibioticsDevelopment economicsIntensive care medicineEconomic growthPolitical scienceMicrobiologyBiologyLawEcologyEconomicsPoliticsAntibiotic Use and ResistanceAntibiotic Resistance in BacteriaBacterial Identification and Susceptibility Testing
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