| Literature DB >> 31637031 |
Abstract
There is a need to develop an evaluation framework to identify intervention priorities to reduce antimicrobial use (AMU) across clinical, agricultural and environmental settings. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) can be conceptualised and therefore potentially managed in the same way as an environmental pollution problem. That is, over-use of antimicrobial medicines as inputs to human and animal health leads to unintended leakage of resistance genes that further combine with natural or intrinsic resistance in the environment. The diffuse nature of this leakage means that the private use decision is typically neither cognisant, nor made responsible for the wider social cost, which is the depletion of wider antibiotic effectiveness, a common pool resource or public good. To address this so-called market failure, some authors have suggested a potential to learn from similar management challenges encountered in the sphere of global climate change, specifically, capping use of medically important drugs analogous to limits set on greenhouse gas emissions. Drawing on experience of the economics of greenhouse gas mitigation, this paper explores a potential framework to develop AMU budgets based on a systematic comparative appraisal of the technical, economic, behavioural and policy feasibility of AMU reduction interventions across the One Health domains. The suggested framework responds to a call for global efforts to develop multi-dimensional metrics and a transparent focus to motivate research and policy, and ultimately to inform national and global AMR governance. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: One Health; antimicrobial use; economics; governance
Year: 2019 PMID: 31637031 PMCID: PMC6768363 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-001807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Theoretical Marginal Abatement Cost Curve. AMU, antimicrobial use.
Figure 2Bottom up abatement cost schedule. AM, antimicrobial; MACC, marginal abatement cost curve.
Measures to modify AMU
| Health/clinical | Agriculture and food | Water, sanitation and environment |
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Adherence to therapies Integration of new diagnostics/therapy strategies Effective health messaging and information Promotion of antibiotics Public health messages Voluntary/mandatory/market-based incentives Appropriate access Issue mainstreaming Experience of treatment campaigns Human microbiome, nutritional status, coinfection Available antibiotics Drug combinations vs monotherapies Drug dosage Frequency of dosage Packaging design Syndromic treatment Prophylactic treatment Universal health coverage Deferred prescriptions Distinctive labelling Patient screening and isolation Watchful waiting |
Nudging prescription habits Breeding and precision editing Microbiome manipulation Vaccines/disease eradication Phage and Lysins Immunomodulation Novel antimicrobials In feed enzymes Prebiotics and probiotics Phytochemicals (eg, essential oils) Biosecurity/heard health planning Husbandry Housing and animal welfare Shift away from growth promoters Training veterinary medics in importance of responsible antibiotic use Improved biosecurity at farms Rapid and cheap diagnostics Restrictions on highly critical antibiotics Peptides Antibodies Improve carcass and food handling Reduce effluents from farms |
Improved sanitation Improved access to clean water Primary, secondary and tertiary water treatment Regulatory standards on discharges of antibiotics from production facilities including determination of differentiated maximum admissible levels of an antibiotic, ARB or ARG Farm waste management membrane filtration, activated carbon bio filters, photo-driven technologies and ozonation, wetland-treatment Infection prevention and control |