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Antimicrobial Resistance and their Effects

Antimicrobial Resistance is very important topic for government exams. We are going to discuss antimicrobial resistance in detail so that aspirants get conceptual clarity about the topic and they will be able to solve questions coming from this topic.

Antimicrobial Resistance:

Main Causes of Antimicrobial Resistance:

Major Concerns related to Antimicrobial Resistance:

Why Antibodies are more effective on bacterial infections than viral infections?

Taxonomically, all bacteria are more closely related to each other than to viruses and vice versa. This means that many important life processes are similar in bacterial groups but not shared with viral groups. As a result, a drug that blocks any of these life processes in one group member may act on many other members. However, the same drug does not work against microorganisms belonging to different groups. Take antibiotics for example. They often block important biochemical pathways for bacteria. For example, many bacteria build cell walls to protect themselves. The antibiotic penicillin blocks the bacterial process of building cell walls. As a result, the growing bacteria can no longer form cell walls and easily die. In any case, human cells do not form cell walls, so penicillin cannot have such an effect on us. Similarly, many antibiotics act against many types of bacteria, not just one group. However, viruses do not use any of these pathways, so antibiotics are ineffective against viral infections. If you have a cold, taking antibiotics will not reduce the severity or duration of your illness. However, if you have a bacterial infection in addition to a viral cold, taking antibiotics can help. Still, antibiotics only work against the bacterial part of the infection, not the viral infection.



Measures Taken Against Antimicrobial Resistance:

A. Global Efforts:

1. Global Antimicrobial Resistance Action Plan (GAP)
Countries around the world committed to the framework set out in the 2015 Global Action Plan (GAP) on AMR during the 2015 World Health Assembly.
The States are required to develop and implement national action plans to combat microbial resistance.

2. Tripartite Secretariat
A tripartite secretariat (FAO, World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), and WHO) will be established in 2016.
This is intended to promote multi-stakeholder involvement in AMR.

3. World Antimicrobial Awareness Week (WAAW)
Held every year since 2015. This is a global campaign aimed at raising awareness of antimicrobial resistance around the world.

4. Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System
Launched by WHO in 2015, it continues to fill knowledge gaps and inform strategies at all levels. It is designed to progressively incorporate data from antimicrobial resistance investigations in humans, pharmaceuticals, the food chain, and the environment.

5. Global R&D priorities for AMR
To guide the research and development of new antimicrobials, diagnostics, and vaccines, WHO produced its WHO list of priority pathogens in 2017. It will be updated in 2022.  Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership (GARDP)

6. A joint initiative of WHO and the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative
The partnership aims to develop and deliver five new therapies by 2025 that target drug-resistant bacteria identified by WHO as the greatest threat.

B. By India:

 

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