Title: Strategy and Policy Cohesion:
1Strategy and Policy CohesionThe One Health
Agenda will it deliver
- Elizabeth J. Phillips, MD, FRCPC,FRACP, FACTM
- Professor Director, Centre for Clinical
Pharmacology Infectious Diseases - Institute for Immunology Infectious Diseases,
Murdoch University - John A. Oates Chair in Clinical Research
- Professor of Medicine Pharmacology
- Director of Personalized Immunology
- Oates Institute for Experimental Therapeutics
- Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
2Drugs Dont WorkAllan Roses, December 2003VP
of Genetics (GSK)
- gt90 of drugs have efficacy in 30-50 of people
3Overview of Global and National Response
- Social, financial and environmental depth
- Education and communication
- National antimicrobial resistance response
documents supporting commitment - Global antimicrobial response
- Implementation what are the measurable outcomes
4The AMR One Health Policy Toolkit Animal-Human
Interface
- Awareness
- Surveillance (obstacles to data collection) and
antimicrobial stewardship in agriculture - Education and Communication
- Evidence base (decreased AMR after voluntary
withdrawal) and ongoing effectiveness monitoring - Broad agricultural implications and complexity of
the AMR web (aquaculture, the plant
connection) - Alternatives to antimicrobials in agriculture
- Industry and regulatory issues
5Globalisation Governance of AMR
- Challenges in developing world parallel those in
developed world political cultural
considerations - Defining extent of problem, educational compaigns
- Conservation of antibiotics and promote
stewardship and infection control - Challenges of global demand for animal protein
(antimicrobial consumption in agriculture) need
incentives to change practice, non-antibiotic
approaches, infection control - AMR shows no boundaries
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8One Health Approach
- Broadly engage
- Doctors, veterinarians, farmers, industry and
community - Consistent approaches
- Infection prevention, optimize antibiotic
utilization in human and animal sectors, new
treatments and diagnostic methods - Simple messages
- What can be done now?
- Reinforce positive achievements, raise awareness
of risk, attention to health science, social,
environmental and economic issues and
uncertainties surrounding all
Australian Colloquium 2013
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10Drivers and Consequences of Antimicrobial
Resistance
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12Multidisciplinary Toolkit
- System change
- Training and education
- Evaluation
- Reminders (eg workplace)
- Safety climate
- Adapt to culture
Dr. Didier Pittet
13Allegranzi, Lancet ID Oct 2013
14Partnership, Leadership Innovation
- The Human health and social care sector
- Livestock, food retail and veterinary sectors
- Research councils, other research funders and
academics - Pharmaceutical industry
- Local governments, professional boards, scentific
and other advisory committees
UK 5 year antimicrobial resistance strategy
2013-2018
15WHO Global Action Plan
- Building Block 1 AWARENESS
- Building Block 2 IDENTIFYING and
OPERATIONALIZING INFECTION PREVENTION APPROACHES - Building Block 3 OPTIMIZING ANTIMICROBIAL USE IN
HUMAN ANIMAL HEALTH AGRICULTURE - Building Block 4 CLOSING KNOWLEDGE GAPS
- Building Block 5 INNOVATION
- Building Block 6 COSTS AND INVESTMENT
16US National Goals, Sept 2014
- 1. Slow Emergence of AMR
- 2. Strengthen National One-Health Surveillance
Efforts - 3. Advance development of rapid diagnostic tests
to identify and characterize AMR. - 4. New Antibiotics, therapeutics and vaccines
- 5. Global effort on AMR prevention,
surveillance, control and antibiotic RD.
17Canadian AMR Response
- ACTION 1 establish and increase surveillance in
both animal and human settings - ACTION 2 promote appropriate antibiotic use in
animal and human settings - ACTION 3 work with animal agriculture sector
(antibiotic stewardship in veterinary medicine) - ACTION 4 promote innovation
October 2014
18Where to go from here?
- Definition and measurement of problem, awareness
and broad and global engagement - Build on existing success and models that have a
proven track record - What can we do now and defining priorities
- What are the short and long-term measurable
outcomes - Diagnostic test development
- Antibiotic pipeline (a lengthy process that will
not modify behavior or attack root of the
problem) - Other approaches (vaccine, non-antimicrobial)
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21Lancet ID 2013
22US National Goals (A partnership between
healthcare, public health, vetinary medicine,
agriculture, food safety and federal, academic
and industrial research)