Journal Article

Antimicrobial Resistance and Universal Health Coverage

Published on 31 October 2017

The WHO launched a Global Action Plan on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in 2015. World leaders in the G7, G20 and the UN General Assembly have declared AMR to be a global crisis. World leaders have also adopted universal health coverage (UHC) as a key target under the sustainable development goals.

This paper argues that neither initiative is likely to succeed in isolation from the other and that the policy goals should be to both provide access to appropriate antimicrobial treatment and reduce the risk of the emergence and spread of resistance by taking a systems approach. It focuses on outpatient treatment of human infections and identifies a number of interventions that would be needed to achieve these policy goals. It then shows how a strategy for achieving key attributes of a health system for UHC can take into account the need to address AMR as part of a UHC strategy in any country. It concludes with a list of recommended priority actions for integrating initiatives on AMR and UHC.

Cite this publication

Bloom G, Merrett GB, Wilkinson A, et al. Antimicrobial resistance and universal health coverage. BMJ Glob Health 2017;2:e000518. doi:10.1136/ bmjgh-2017-000518

Authors

Gerald Bloom

Research Fellow

Annie Wilkinson

Health and Nutrition Cluster Lead

Research Officer

Publication details

authors
Bloom, G., Buckland Merrett, Gemma., Wilkinson, A., Lin, V. and Paulin, S.
language
English

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