| Literature DB >> 31139446 |
Grant Hill-Cawthorne1,2, Joel Negin2, Tony Capon2, Gwendolyn L Gilbert1, Lee Nind3, Michael Nunn4, Patricia Ridgway5, Mark Schipp3, Jenny Firman6, Tania C Sorrell1, Ben J Marais1.
Abstract
With rising population numbers, anthropogenic changes to our environment and unprecedented global connectivity, the World Economic Forum ranks the spread of infectious diseases second only to water crises in terms of potential global impact. Addressing the diverse challenges to human health and well-being in the 21st century requires an overarching focus on 'Planetary Health', with input from all sectors of government, non-governmental organisations, academic institutions and industry. To clarify and advance the Planetary Health agenda within Australia, specifically in relation to emerging infectious diseases (EID) and antimicrobial resistance (AMR), national experts and key stakeholders were invited to a facilitated workshop. EID themes identified included animal reservoirs, targeted surveillance, mechanisms of emergence and the role of unrecognised human vectors (the 'invisible man') in the spread of infection. Themes related to AMR included antimicrobial use in production and companion animals, antimicrobial stewardship, novel treatment approaches and education of professionals, politicians and the general public. Effective infection control strategies are important in both EID and AMR. We provide an overview of key discussion points, as well as important barriers identified and solutions proposed.Entities:
Keywords: asia-pacific; multidisciplinary; one health; one/eco health; planetary health
Year: 2019 PMID: 31139446 PMCID: PMC6509602 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Responses to open-ended questions on antimicrobial resistance (AMR)
| Question | Responses |
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Global spread and dominance of totally antimicrobial resistant pathogens—returning to the preantibiotic era |
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Environmental impact of antimicrobial use in humans, animals and crops Emerging bacterial resistance to biocides and disinfectants. AMR transmission from and to companion animals. Balancing food production capacity with AMR concerns. Need for comprehensive AMR surveillance; understanding the selection, expansion and spread of multidrug-resistant mobile genetic elements (mapping the mobile gene pool). Antibiotic stewardship—understanding why doctors prescribe and patients demand, antimicrobials inappropriately. Better infection control within health and aged care facilities. Point-of-care diagnostics (including rapid species identification and drug susceptibility testing). Use of highly selective bacteriophage therapy. Adaptive clinical trial designs for rapid assessment of multidrug regimens Alternative drug development funding models that considers the public good. Non-antimicrobial approaches to controlling infections. |
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Are there effective treatment strategies that will reduce selective pressure and on-going evolutionary ‘escape’, such as increasing bacterial susceptibility to immune attack or reducing the risk/impact of invasive bacterial infection only? What are the key characteristics of a healthy microbiome and the short and long term impacts of antimicrobial induced changes? |
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Restricting antimicrobial access to reduce inappropriate use, for example stronger regulation or increases in price How best to educate the general public and prescribers about the dangers (personal and environmental) of inappropriate antimicrobial use. Balancing animal and human welfare considerations. Balancing distributive justice and community versus individual cost–benefit. |
AMR, antimicrobial resistance.
Key barriers and proposed solutions relating to AMR and antimicrobial use
| Key barriers | Proposed solutions |
| Potentially divisive arguments of human versus animal use |
Develop joint National AMR Strategy with input from all sectors. Restrict use of antimicrobials in agriculture to those with limited cross-over resistance. Companion animals to have the same access as humans. |
| Companion animals are excluded from agriculture and health portfolios |
Provide a ‘home’ for companion animal health within the Commonwealth government structures. Provide AMR prescribing guidelines for companion animals, including antimicrobial stewardship programmes and improved infection control. |
| Problem of attribution |
Elucidate sources of AMR organisms including in humans (hospital vs community), animals (companion vs livestock vs wildlife) and environment (eg, water or soil). Provide research funding for negative impacts on ecosystems and animal health, irrespective of human health. |
| Limited funding for multidisciplinary research |
Provide funding avenues for multidisciplinary research, especially those combining human, animal and environmental health. Consider dedicated funding provision from the new MRFF. |
| Global/regional rather than a national problem |
Focus on AMR (including growing drug resistance in tuberculosis and malaria) as part of the DFAT regional Health Security agenda. Strengthened international/regional AMR legislation, improved governance and stewardship should be key international development outcomes. WHO to develop better global AMR accountability measures. |
| Spread of mobile resistance elements |
Understand and monitor the mobile genetic pool, including spread by wild animals and bird populations. Support regional/global strategies. |
| Antimicrobials are cheap and easily available |
Restrict prescribing of certain antimicrobials. Consider deferred prescribing if uncertain diagnosis and not acutely ill. Consider ways to make antimicrobials more expensive,* without restricting access for people who need them. |
| Unnecessary supply and perceived public demand |
Educate children and the public about responsible antimicrobial use. Institute effective antimicrobial stewardship programmes. Make institutional antimicrobial use and drug resistance profiles public. |
| Inadequate infection control leading to transmission of AMR organisms |
Improved sanitation and environmental hygiene. Better infection control practice in hospitals and other healthcare settings. Better infection control awareness in the general community and targeted measures in congregate settings. |
| Poor communication and collaboration between states |
Standard approach taken across states and territories. Standardise susceptibility testing, surveillance, governance and antimicrobial stewardship procedures. Consider routine reporting of drug-resistant infections as good clinical practice (laboratory accreditation requirement). |
| Antimicrobial development deliver poor return on investment |
Recognise the failure of standard market mechanisms Advocate for the development of alternative funding models, including consideration of public–private partnerships or a health insurance model. Develop less expensive adaptive trial strategies. |
*There was concern that an imposed AMR tax may limit or distort appropriate use in people who really need antibiotics.
AMR, antimicrobial resistance; DFAT, Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade; MRFF, Medical Research Futures fund.
Processes and activities proposed to move the National Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID) agenda forward in Australia, using an ambitious Planetary Health approach
| EID | |
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| Develop a National EID strategy* |
Follow-up meeting jointly led by the Departments of Health and Agriculture and Water Resources, involving academia, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). Political advocacy to improve awareness, create a sense of urgency and ensure cross-ministerial support. Establish a national EID expert committee, including leaders from recently established Centres of Research Excellence in EIDs, Communicable Disease Network, Australia, OzFoodNet ( Convene an expert panel to draft a Road Map for a national response to the threat of Emerging Infectious Diseases (including human, animal and plant diseases of major consequence)—coordinated nationally and led by the Departments of Health and Agriculture and Water Resources. Develop a National Strategy* that links closely with the ‘Responding to the threat of antimicrobial resistance’ strategy 2015–2019. Develop and monitor national EID surveillance, preparedness and response plans. Develop frameworks for the optimal and ethical application of new technologies, such as social network surveillance and advanced pathogen genomics. |
| Provide leadership within the Asia Pacific region and link with international efforts |
Strengthen linkages with and support of regional WHO offices (Western Pacific and Southeast Asia), especially the ‘Health Security and Emergencies’ and ‘communicable diseases’ sections and other regional mechanisms and forums, including the South Pacific Commission, the East Asia Summit and the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation, as well as global initiatives such as Global Health Security Agenda and the Development Banks. Scope country-level implementation of IHR-2005. Encourage adequate funding of DFAT’s Regional Health Security strategy. Link with One/Eco/Planetary health communities in other countries, encourage a ‘united front’ and support international efforts |
*This was recently completed,51 but many of the core elements remain to be executed.
Responses to open-ended questions on EIDs
| Question | Responses |
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Escape of a genetically engineered highly pathogenic transmissible agent. Rapid global spread of a hypervirulent respiratory virus. High pathogenicity virus spread by ubiquitous day-biting mosquitoes. High pathogenicity virus with a long presymptomatic period or absence of symptoms in some infectious individuals (‘silent man’) or prolonged viral shedding post recovery. |
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Improving basic EID literacy (professionals, politicians and public) Enhanced EID surveillance and risk mapping. Defining the mechanisms of pathogen host species ‘jumping’. Understanding social mobility and community network structures. Eco-friendly infection control conscious city planning. Protecting frontline staff. Immunisation strategies for disease prevention and outbreak response. Developing rapid accurate diagnostics and effective treatment. Minimising adverse economic impacts. Advanced scenario planning to guide action in an emergency. |
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What are all the infectious agents that exist in nature and their respective spill-over risk to humans? How to accurately value ecosystem services and the societal cost of human-induced ecosystem disturbance? |
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Accepted levels of public surveillance, including strategies for early outbreak detection and transmission chain tracking. Justification for escalating degrees of intervention. How to keep the public informed during a crisis. Compensation for those affected by disease containment strategies. Balancing individual and community risks/benefits in decision-making. Balancing the best interests of current and future generations. |
EID, Emerging Infectious Disease.
Key barriers and proposed solutions relating to EIDs
| Key barriers | Proposed solutions |
| Rapid loss of interest after a crisis is resolved |
Health security to be given standing priority. Ensure that the lessons learnt from EID crises/scares are reviewed and appropriate actions implemented; create national expert body to facilitate this. Continuous education of politicians and the general public. |
| Politicians hearing many different voices |
Scientists to consolidate messaging (national expert body). Package scientific findings into effective messages. |
| Communication of uncertainty |
Work with politicians and the public to view EID preparation and scenario planning as an insurance policy. Refine scenario planning and improve preparedness at all levels (public health officials, researchers, professional groups and policymakers). Work with the public and the media to optimise communication. |
| Delay in getting research proposals approved during an outbreak |
Consider important research questions (national expert body). Prepare generic research proposals in advance. Fast-track ethics approval processes during epidemic outbreaks. |
| Weak EID surveillance and response systems within the Asia Pacific region |
Comprehensive assessment of regional IHR-2005 implementation. Improved laboratory/diagnostic capacity and reporting structures. Increased domestic funding, as well as international aid, with a specific focus on regional health security. Expand IHR-2005 to include focus on livestock and wildlife disease surveillance or integrate with complimentary processes such as the OIE’s Evaluation of Performance of Veterinary Services. Remunerate farmers for losses incurred as a result of disease detection to secure their cooperation in surveillance efforts. |
| Separation of animal and human disease data, research and policy |
Identify overlapping issues in human and animal health; understand and respect each other’s perspectives. Funding agencies to encourage and support joint research opportunities that links human, animal and environmental health. Create national oversight body containing human, animal and environmental health experts. |
| Separate government structures for human and animal public health |
Encourage cross-discipline collaboration at Commonwealth and State levels; regular meetings between human and animal public health officials (including wildlife). Increase cross-ministerial interaction at Cabinet and senior government official level. |
| Restrictive discipline focus in academic institutions |
Broaden undergraduate exposure to the ‘natural sciences’. Encourage multidisciplinary perspectives and complex systems awareness at under and post-graduate levels, for example, joint One/Eco/Planetary Health training between medical and veterinary schools; Master degrees in One/Eco/Planetary Health, Health Security or Complex Systems. |
EID, Emerging Infectious Disease; IHR, International Health Regulations; OIE, World Organisation of Animal Health.