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Global Leaders Commit to Reducing Antibiotic-Resistant Infections by 10% by 2030
During a high-profile meeting at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York on Thursday, global leaders made a critical pledge to cut the death toll from antibiotic-resistant infections by 10% by 2030. The political declaration sets a global agenda to combat antimicrobial resistance (AMR), a growing threat as bacteria and fungi evolve to resist existing drugs.
AMR, which has emerged due to the overuse of antibiotics in medicine, agriculture, and crop farming, has become a global health crisis. In 2019, AMR was linked to 4.95 million deaths, and experts predict over 39 million could die from drug-resistant infections by 2050 without urgent action.
The declaration requires every country to implement a national action plan by 2030, spanning governments, the farming industry, and the health sector. However, only 11% of countries currently have dedicated funding in their national budgets for AMR plans. To address this, the agreement sets a $100 million fundraising target to help low- and middle-income countries, which are disproportionately impacted by AMR.
Philemon Yang, UNGA President and former Cameroonian leader, called the agreement a “strong blueprint for accelerating action against AMR,” while emphasizing the importance of turning declarations into concrete action.
While lower-income nations face the greatest burden from AMR, it remains a global health threat. In the European Union alone, AMR causes at least 33,000 deaths annually and incurs societal costs of around €1.5 billion. EU health chief Stella Kyriakides urged global cooperation, stating, “We need to continue supporting each other and dedicate enough resources to tackle this serious issue.” She also announced a €62 million EU budget for AMR and the launch of the European Partnership on One Health AMR next year to promote collaboration across sectors.
The agreement pushes for better waste management by drug manufacturers, a shift from antimicrobials to vaccines on animal farms, and ensuring that 80% of countries can test for antibiotic resistance by 2030. Without these efforts, AMR could reverse a century of medical progress, making treatable conditions fatal, warned WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
Despite this global commitment, challenges remain. Government negotiations watered down parts of the original declaration, including a specific plan to reduce antimicrobial use in farming by 30%.
Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, who chairs a global leadership group on AMR, emphasized the need for new antibiotics and warned that the world must invest in research or face a rising death toll. Comparing AMR to the climate crisis, Mottley called for urgent collective action, adding, “We need everybody to make a change in this.”
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