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A
poultry operation in Egypt. Good hygiene on farms can help stem the rise of AMR
due to over-reliance on antimicrobials. Photo: FAO/Giulio Napolitano
21 September 2016 –
Meeting at the United Nations today, world leaders signalled an unprecedented
level of attention to curb the spread of infections that are resistant to
antimicrobial medicines.
Speaking at the
meeting, UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon said,
antimicrobial resistance poses “a fundamental, long-term threat to human
health, sustainable food production and development.”
“It is not that it may
happen in the future. It is a very present reality – in all parts of the world,
in developing and developed countries; in rural and urban areas; in hospitals;
on farms and in communities,” Mr. Ban noted.
Antimicrobial resistance threatens the
achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals and requires a global response
The Secretary-General
also expressed concern at loss of ability to protect both people and animals
from life-threatening infections due to antimicrobial resistance.
Antimicrobial
resistance (AMR) happens when bacteria, viruses, parasites, and fungi develop
resistance against medicines that were previously able to cure them.
“Let me give just a
few, sobering examples,” said Mr. Ban, enumerating a host of diseases that now
rampant due to antimicrobial resistance.
“More than 200,000
newborn children are estimated to die each year from infections that do not
respond to available antibiotics. An epidemic of multidrug-resistant typhoid is
now sweeping across parts of Africa, being spread through water. Resistance to
HIV/AIDS drugs is on the rise. Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis has been
identified in 105 countries. And resistance to antimalarial medicines is an
urgent public health concern in the Greater Mekong sub-region,” said the
Secretary-General.
“These trends are
undermining hard-won achievements under the Millennium Development Goals,
including against HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria and the survival of mothers and
children. If we fail to address this problem quickly and comprehensively,
antimicrobial resistance will make providing high quality universal health
coverage more difficult, if not impossible,” said the Secretary-General, also
noting that it would put the Sustainable Development Goals in jeopardy – a
message emphasized by Mr. Peter Thomson, President of the 71st session of the
UN General Assembly and convener of the high level meeting.
World leaders meeting at the UN have committed to taking a broad, coordinated approach to tackling the root causes of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Credit: UN News Centre
World leaders meeting at the UN have committed to taking a broad, coordinated approach to tackling the root causes of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Credit: UN News Centre
"Antimicrobial
resistance threatens the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals and
requires a global response," Mr. Thomson said.
"Member States
have today agreed upon a strong political declaration that provides a good
basis for the international community to move forward. No one country, sector
or organization can address this issue alone," Mr. Thomson stressed, at
the meeting co-organized by the World Health Organization (WHO), the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and the World Organisation for
Animal Health (OIE).
Mr. Ban said in order
to create a world that is safer, more healthy and more productive, there was
need for deep engagement, cooperation and coordination of several sectors, and
sustained financing.
For the first time,
Heads of States committed to taking a broad, coordinated approach to address
the root causes of AMR across multiple sectors, especially human health, animal
health and agriculture. This is only the fourth time a health issue has been
taken up by the UN General Assembly (the others were HIV, non-communicable
diseases, and Ebola).
Seen as a collective
effort to address a challenge to health, food security, and development,
countries reaffirmed their commitment to develop national action plans on AMR,
based on the Global Action Plan on Antimicrobial Resistance — the blueprint for
tackling AMR, developed in 2015 by WHO, in coordination with FAO and OIE.
In a joint statement
issued during the meeting, WHO, FAO and OIE noted that “such plans are needed
to understand the full scale of the problem and stop the misuse of
antimicrobial medicines in human health, animal health and agriculture.”
Margaret Chan (left),
Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), José Graziano da Silva
(center), Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and
Monique Eloit (right), Director General of the World Organization for Animal
Health (OIE), address journalists on the high-level meetign on antimicrobial
resistance. UN Photo/Loey Felipe
“Leaders recognized
the need for stronger systems to monitor drug-resistant infections and the
volume of antimicrobials used in humans, animals and crops, as well as
increased international cooperation and funding,” noted the statement.
The statement also
highlighted some of the commitments made by world leaders in tackling AMR.
“They pledged to strengthen regulation of antimicrobials, improve knowledge and
awareness, and promote best practices — as well as to foster innovative
approaches using alternatives to antimicrobials and new technologies for
diagnosis and vaccines,” it said.
“Antimicrobial
resistance poses a fundamental threat to human health, development, and
security. The commitments made today must now be translated into swift,
effective, lifesaving actions across the human, animal and environmental health
sectors. We are running out of time,” said Dr.
Margaret Chan, the Director-General of WHO.
Common and
life-threatening infections like pneumonia, gonorrhoea, and post-operative
infections, as well as HIV, tuberculosis and malaria are increasingly becoming
untreatable because of AMR. “Left unchecked, AMR is predicted to have
significant social, health security, and economic repercussions that will seriously
undermine the development of countries,” noted the joint statement.
HIV/ AIDS
Almaz Desta is one of Community
Child Care Coalition beneficiary families, Almaz is living with HIV AIDS, her
current health condition is much improved with the help of CCC. Photo:
UNICEF/Sewunet
According to WHO, FAO
and OIE, the high levels of AMR already seen in the world today are the result
of overuse and misuse of antibiotics and other antimicrobials in humans,
animals (including farmed fish), and crops, as well as the spread of residues
of these medicines in soil, crops and water. Within the broader context of AMR,
resistance to antibiotics is considered the greatest and most urgent global
risk requiring international and national attention.
“AMR is a problem not
just in our hospitals, but on our farms and in our food, too. Agriculture must
shoulder its share of responsibility, both by using antimicrobials more
responsibly and by cutting down on the need to use them, through good farm
hygiene,” said Dr. José Graziano da Silva, the Director-General of FAO.
Speaking during the
meeting, Dr. Monique Eloit, OIE Director-General, said “Effective and
accessible antibiotics are as vital for protecting animal health and welfare
and good veterinary medicine as they are for human health. We urge national
authorities to strongly support all sectors involved, through promotion of
responsible and prudent use, good practices and implementation of established
standards and guidelines.”
Leaders at the UN
meeting called on WHO, FAO and OIE, in collaboration with development banks
such the World Bank other relevant stakeholders, to coordinate their planning
and actions and to report back to the UN General Assembly in September 2018.
At the meeting,
countries called for better use of existing, cost-effective tools for
preventing infections in humans and animals, including immunization, safe water
and sanitation, and good hygiene in hospitals and animal husbandry. “Putting in
place systems to ensure more appropriate use of existing and new antibiotics is
also essential,” noted a joint statement from the joint organizers of the
meeting.
Highlighting market
failures, they called for new incentives for investment in research, and
development of new, effective and affordable medicines, rapid diagnostic tests,
and other important therapies to replace those that are losing their power.
They also stressed
that affordability and access to existing and new antibiotics, vaccines and
other medical tools, should be a global priority, while taking into account the
needs of all countries.
Nguồn: www.un.org





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