| Literature DB >> 28874347 |
Manish Kakkar1, Anuj Sharma1, Sirenda Vong2.
Abstract
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Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28874347 PMCID: PMC5598290 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.j3760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Indicators for situational analysis and monitoring of AMR
| WHO strategic objective | Focus area | Indicator | Description and best practices |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 |
| NAP in line with GAP-AMR | Comprehensive and multisectoral NAP implemented with a coordination body, an operational plan, a monitoring system and adequate funding |
| 2 |
| Laboratory based AMR surveillance system | National human AMR surveillance in place and functional to monitor AMR trends accurately and timely with national guidelines and regulations (minimum representative datasets, standards, definitions, methodology, standards of quality implemented) |
| Laboratory capacity strengthening | A national network of quality assured laboratories that contributes quality and proper data to national AMR surveillance | ||
| Early warning system | Early warning systems with integrated rapid response mechanisms have been incorporated in the human AMR surveillance system | ||
| 4 |
| National antimicrobials containment policy | A national AMR containment policy for control of human use of antimicrobials that is implemented and enforced. AMR containment policies include vaccination policies and high coverage where appropriate |
| National regulatory authorities | Competent and functional regulatory authority with capacity to ensure and enforce antibiotic quality standards, to take measures against substandard products, and to inspect pharmacies. | ||
| Regulation of finished antibiotic products and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) used to manufacture antibiotics for human use | Comprehensive, multisectoral drug act is implemented nationally to regulate the production/manufacture import/export of antibiotics and APIs where appropriate | ||
| Regulation of supply chain | A national policy or act is in place to regulate the supply chain management of antibiotics and APIs. | ||
| Regulation of pharmacies | Presence of a regulatory system, with monitoring and evaluation frameworks, to prevent over the counter sale and inappropriate sale of antibiotics and APIs | ||
| Surveillance of use and sale of antimicrobials in the human sector | Surveillance is in place and is functional to monitor sales and use in humans that produces representative and quality data | ||
| 3 |
| Surveillance of healthcare associated infections and antimicrobial use | Formulation of national guidelines and policy on healthcare associated infections and antimicrobial use for healthcare facilities |
| AMR stewardship programme | Training, education, and capacity building programme. Protocols, SOPs and guidelines for IPC are available based on nature and type of healthcare facility | ||
| Policies and practices and governance mechanisms for the programmatic control of emergence of AMR in healthcare settings | Formulation of a national policy on infection prevention and control for healthcare facilities. Implementation of an AMR control programme providing guidance and best practices for implementing antimicrobial stewardship and rational use of antimicrobials in each healthcare facility | ||
| 1 |
| Antibiotic awareness campaign | Implementation and monitoring of a national programme to improve awareness of AMR and AMR containment interventions |
| Professional education and training | Implementation and monitoring of policy on education and training strategies for professionals, paraprofessionals, and other occupational groups | ||
| 5 |
| Proper environment for research and innovation | Investing in development of new drugs, diagnostics, and interventions through increased research funding. National policy to promote and foster innovation to combat AMR |
| Horizon scanning | Latest updates on research agenda and advances | ||
| 1-5 |
| A national AMR containment policy and regulatory framework for control of animal use and their registration for use | Implementation, enforcement, and monitoring of national policy and plan on use of antimicrobials and regulatory frameworks for control of animal use and their registration for use |
| Surveillance of use and sale of antimicrobials in veterinary sectors | The national policy and plan that identifies activities linked to use and sales of antimicrobials at national level in the veterinary sector and surveillance of AMR and antimicrobial usage | ||
| Infection prevention and control in the animal sector. Animal health and agricultural practices | Development and implementation of best practices on infection prevention in animal by species or commodity. Surveillance and policies developed to control contamination of food abiding by the Codex Alimentarius standards | ||
| Vaccination in animals to prevent and reduce infection in food animals | Development of a vaccination policy for animals, including outlining implementation strategies through microplans developed at local levels | ||
| Awareness in animal sector | Strategy to engage veterinary sector in AMR prevention and control through awareness generation and education in the animal health sector |
AMR=antimicrobial resistance; GAP-AMR=global action plan on AMR; IPC=infection prevention and control; NAP=national action plan; SOP=standard operating procedure.
Phases of implementing a programme for AMR prevention and control
| Phase of programme implementation | What it means |
|---|---|
|
| The country has no programmes systematically implemented to conduct AMR prevention and control. The process of designing a programme has been started and activities may include: |
|
| The country has decided to implement a programme. Initial activities under way to launch the programme may include: |
|
| This is probably the most challenging phase in the early implementation of any programme in developing nations. In this phase, countries must initiate a change or an intervention, which may have patchy uptake or may be avoided altogether |
|
| This is the process of scaling up a successful model of the programme that may have been trialled in the previous phase. |
|
| This is the highest grade of operational efficiency of the programme and indicates that the programme can have long term survival. |
Instrument for country situation analysis and monitoring of antimicrobial resistance in South East Asia
| Indicators | Phases | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exploration and adoption | Programme installation | Initial implementation | Full operation | Sustainable operation | ||
| 1. National AMR action plan | ||||||
| NAP in line with GAP-AMRGAP | No action plan or no national multisectoral committee or AMR committee established but involving one ministry | AMR working group established and national action plan under way | Action plan aligned with GAP including operational plan with defined activities and respective budget available | Action plan includes operational plan being rolled out and scaled up with defined activities and respective budget | Action plan includes operational plan being rolled out and scaled up with defined activities and respective budget | |
| 2. Awareness raising | ||||||
| Awareness campaigns to the public | Government not involved in awareness raising activities on antibiotic resistance | Some government led activities in parts of the country to raise awareness about AMR and actions to tackle it | Nationwide, government led antibiotic awareness campaign targeting the general public or professionals | Nationwide, government led antibiotic awareness campaign targeting public and professionals | Assessing effects of government led awareness campaigns on behaviour changes in public and professionals | |
| Education and training strategies for professionals | No policy or strategy | Relevant policies developed but ad hoc training courses in some disciplines | AMR included in some preservice training or special courses or both | AMR included in some preservice training or some special courses or both | AMR included in preservice training for all relevant cadres | |
| 3. National AMR surveillance system | ||||||
| National human AMR surveillance | No capacity for AMR laboratory or limited reporting or both, or no surveillance guidelines | Guidelines developed but not fully implemented. Limited quality data and analysis and not fully representative of country | Standardised national AMR surveillance in place and representative of country but limited number of operational sites | Surveillance in place and functional to monitor AMR trends accurately and timely but no contributing data to GLASS | National AMR surveillance regularly assessed and adjusted; and contributing to GLASS | |
| National laboratory network strengthening | No national network developed | A national network with testing according to the international standards is planned | A national reference laboratoryis identified, and quality assured laboratory networks have been developed only at few surveillance sites | A national network of EQA health laboratories has been developed in most or all surveillance sites | A laboratory network is established, EQA measures are in place, and the reference laboratory has demonstrated capacity for research | |
| Early warning systems | No system in place or planned | System planned, in keeping with international standards | System is implemented in pilot mode,or is implemented on a national scale but not fully functional (not sensitive to reportable events) | Demonstrated functional capacity: data centralised and analysed with reports | Demonstrated functional capacity and proof of response from detection | |
| 4. Rational use of antimicrobials and surveillance of use and sale (community based) | ||||||
| A national AMR containment policy for control of human use of antimicrobials; AMR stewardship (AMS) | No or weak national policy and plan, regulations for antimicrobial use, and availability | National AMS programme(AMSP) planned and under development | AMSP is developed, including tools to implement and monitor AMS progress and impact | AMSP implemented by relevant institutions. Regulations for antimicrobial use and availability are implemented in limited capacity | A national AMSP for control of human use of antimicrobials has been implemented and enforced for more than2 years | |
| National Regulatory Authorities (NRA) or Drug Regulatory Authorities (DRA) | No official NRA or DRA or those existing have limited capacity | NRA or DRA with limited capacity but strategic planning in place for capacity building and appropriate budgeting | NRA or DRA system set up for oversight but not fully functional | Tools for quality assurance and registration of antibiotics in place and inspection implemented but limited capacity for enforcement of policies and regulation | Competent and functional NRA or DRA with capacity to ensure or enforce antibiotic quality standards,to take measures against substandard products and to inspect pharmacies | |
| Surveillance of antimicrobial use (and sales in humans | No guidelines for surveillance of use or sales of antimicrobials or both | National policy and plan on surveillance of use of antimicrobials under development or developed and approved but not implemented (surveillance in individual facilities and national level sales) | Monitoring sales of antimicrobials at national level not implemented. Monitoring of use is irregular and limited to few facilities that are not representative | National sales data are collected on a regular basis (every 1-2 years) .Data from [text missing?]are collected from a small and not representative sample of individual healthcare facilities. No established analysis with national AMR laboratory based surveillance | National sales data are collected on a regular basis (every 1-2 years) . AMU surveys are conducted in a representative sample of facilities and translated into actions. Links with national AMR surveillance data are analysed and reported | |
| Regulation of finished antibiotic products and APIs | No official regulation on import, export, production, distribution, and use of finished antibiotic products and APIs or those existing have limited capacity | Regulation with limited capacity but strategic planning in place for capacity building and appropriate budgeting | Regulatory authority and system set up for oversight with a limited functional capability | Regulatory authority and system in place and inspection implemented but with limited capacity for enforcement of policies and regulation | Regulatory authority and system in place and are fully and effectively implemented | |
| Regulation of pharmacies on over the counter sale and inappropriate sale of antibiotics and APIs | No official regulation on over the counter sale and inappropriate sale of antibiotics and APIs | Regulation with limited capacity but strategic planning in place for capacity building and appropriate budgeting | Regulatory authority and system set up for oversight with a limited functional capability | Regulatory authority and system in place and inspection implemented but with limited capacity for enforcement of regulation | Regulatory authority and system in place and are fully and effectively implemented | |
| 5. Infection prevention control and AMR stewardship programme | ||||||
| AMR stewardship programme in healthcare setting | No national AMR stewardship policy or operational plan is available or approved | A national IPC or AMR policy or operational plan is available but weak. SOPs, guidelines, and protocols not available to all hospitals (limited updates) | National IPC, AMR aligned IPC, or AMR plans implemented in limited number of healthcare settings | National IPC, AMR aligned IPC, or AMR plans are implemented in about all healthcare settings | IPC or AMR measures are widely implemented and regularly evaluated and shared | |
| IPC programme in healthcare setting | No national IPC policy, guidelines, or action plans to mandate IPC in healthcare settings | A national capacity building programme, or operational plan, is developed. SOPs, guidelines, and protocols are developed and available but not implemented | IPC programme and capacity building plans are implemented in selected healthcare settings | IPC programme and capacity building plans implemented nationwide | IPC capacity building and programme effectiveness are regularly evaluated and shared | |
| National HAI and related AMR surveillance | No policies, limited national plan and guidelines to mandate hospitals for HAI surveillance | Few public and private facilities have HAI surveillance but data not centralised at national level | Few public and private facilities have HAI surveillance and share data at national level | Centralised data on HAI from several hospitals but with limited capacity for data analysis and detection | Monitoring and response frameworks established to identify critical HAI events, especially related to emergence of AMR indicator bacteria against critical drugs | |
| Sanitation, hygiene, and vaccination | No formal campaign on sanitation, hygiene, and vaccination | Formal campaign to enhance sanitation, hygiene, and vaccination being developed | Formal campaign to enhance sanitation, hygiene, and vaccination is implemented in small scale | Formal campaign to enhance sanitation, hygiene, and vaccination is implemented in large scale | Formal campaign to enhance sanitation, hygiene, and vaccination is implemented in large scale and associated with a monitoring and evaluation system | |
| 6. Research and innovation | ||||||
| Research and development and innovation on AMR prevention and containment (plus research funding) | No policies fostering research environment although capacity exists for research | Policies planned and existing structure has a plan to foster research and innovation on AMR | Presence of policies and investments to foster research and innovation on AMR | Research consortium and dynamic research programme are ongoing led by government agenda | Government led research outputs related to AMR global research agenda | |
| 7. One Health engagement | ||||||
| A national AMR containment policy and regulatory framework for control of animal use and their registration for use | No national policy or plan to reduce use of antibiotics | National policy and plan on use of antimicrobials developed and approved or regulatory framework for control of animal use and their registration for use is developed but not implemented | Implementation of policy and plan but limited capacity for monitoring use and quality of drugs | Policy and plan implemented with some capacity for monitoring but limited capacity for enforcement | Policy and plan implemented with proper capacity for monitoring and increased capacity for enforcement | |
| National surveillance of AMR and use and sales of antimicrobials at national level in the veterinary sector | No or weak national policy and guidelines | Limited capacity for surveillance of sales, AMR, or AMU | Some capacity and data generated from sales, AMR or AMU | Some comparative analysis of surveillance data between AMR and AMU | Comprehensive approach of surveillance with coordinated analysis between humans and animals | |
| Infection prevention and control in the animal sector | No policy and national guidelines developed for biosecurity to reduce infection rates in food and both large producers and small holders | Policies and national guidelines in line with international standards planned including vaccination policy and Codex Alimentarius standards | Limited implementation, particularly in large producers | Full implementation | Fully implemented in multiple areas with a monitoring framework in place | |
| AMR awareness generation and education in the animal sector | No policies or strategies exist or are only planned | Policies or strategies developed | AMR in some pre- service training or special courses or both | AMR in some pre- service training or special courses or both | Effect of education programme on behaviour changes is assessed | |
AMR=antimicrobial resistance; AMU=antimicrobial usage; API=active pharmaceutical ingredient; EQA=external quality assessment; GAP-AMR=global action plan on antimicrobial resistance; GLASS=global antimicrobial resistance surveillance system; HAI=hospital acquired infections; IPC=infection prevention and control; NAP=national action plan; SOP=standard operating procedures.