Friday, April 19, 2024 | Shawwal 9, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Looking for action on Anti Microbial Resistance

Oman hosts Third Global High Level Ministerial Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance
minus
plus

Turning ambition into action is what the Third Global High-Level Ministerial Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance plan to achieve through the two day discussions being held in Muscat.






​​​​​​​


The Conference aims to accelerate tackling the anti microbial resistance at the national, regional, and global levels, as well as to promote international cooperation.


​​​​​​​


At the opening ceremony, Oman’s Minister of Health, Dr Hilal al Sabti, said fighting microbes is one of the 10 challenges concerning human Heath. He said that if measures are not taken, globally, by 2050 it could cause 10 million deaths annually and have an impact on GDP.


More than 40 representatives from different countries are participating in the event that also wraps up the awareness week on anti microbial resistance.


Speaking to the Observer on the sidelines of the meeting, the minister said that there is the Muscat Manifesto that is coming up from this highly important ministerial meeting.


He said, “The reason why this event is important is because of the policies and procedures that will come out of this meeting. The manifesto is important for all of us as it will ultimately show the roadmap as guiding on how we are going to streamline the processes in the future for preventing the abuse or over use of antibiotics.”


The Conference is being conducted through keynote speeches, case studies to demonstrate best practices, and interactive discussions between participants, as well as an interactive dialogue on One Health action to address the AMR pandemic. The theme of the Conference this year is "The AMR Pandemic: from Policy to One Health Action".





​​​​​​​


Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director General of World Health Organisation said he hopes that, “This meeting will pave towards bold and concrete political will.”


In his address, the Director General of FAO said that AMR is one of the top 10 global public health challenges, causing approximately 1.3 million deaths every year.


He said, “The impact of AMR, however, goes far beyond human health, threatening animal health and welfare, the environment, food and nutrition security and safety, and economic growth.”


According to the FAO official, to curb the rise of AMR, a One Health approach is needed that enables actors from different sectors to design intervention strategies that synergize and complement each other, resulting in one coherent global effort to tackle AMR.


He pointed out, “70% of antimicrobials sold globally are used in production animals.”


The Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Health and Vice Chair of One Health Global Leaders Group on AMR, Malta, Chris Fearne, said that there is plenty of data on humans, but not enough on animals and no data on plants and environment and this is a concern.


“The extend of anti microbial resistance is well known in humans because we have about 5 million deaths attributed to anti microbial resistance. But we do not have enough data when it comes to animal health, plant health and environment. Therefore surveillance not only on humans, but on animals, plants and environment is essential if we want to have antibiotics that will work in the next few years,” he explained.


The conference will conclude on Friday.


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon