Members Login





Further reading on AMR

On this page you can download several publications (PDF) containing more information about antimicrobial resistance.

Interesting websites:

Back to top

Back to AMR Campaign 

 
13/08/2009: EPN - UON public education forum

NAIROBI - The Ecumenical Pharmaceutical Network (EPN) and University of Nairobi (UON) College of Health Science, hosted a public education forum to discuss the growing problem of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) and explore ways of preserving the effectiveness of the available medicines.

The public forum took place on 13th August 2009 at the University of Nairobi (UON), School of Medicine, Kenyatta National Hospital.

Click here to read the media advisory:
http://www.essentialdrugs.org/edrug/archive/200908/msg00012.php

Below you can find some of the presentations that were given during the public education forum: 

Back to AMR Campaign

 

 

 

‘Fight AMR! Save medicines for our children’ is a campaign of EPN and its partners aimed at raising awareness about the challenge of Antimicrobial resistance among all relevant stakeholders. The campaign is intended to stimulate renewed attention to fighting AMR both locally and globally. The key campaign tool is a call to action document developed by representatives from the EPN membership in Moshi, Tanzania in November 2008. The call to action is targeted at all the different groups of stakeholders who are in position to contribute to implementation of the containment actions that have been defined in the WHO Global Strategy for Containment of Antimicrobial Resistance (2001). Apart from using the call to reach out to the relevant stakeholders, EPN members have undertaken a number of other activities including:

  • Sensitization seminars for health professionals in Malawi, Togo, Kenya, Cameroon and Nigeria.
  • Education for children and high school students on rational use of antibiotics in Moldova and India.
  • Research to investigate knowledge and perceptions on Antibiotic use and Antimicrobial resistance in Sierra Leone and Tanzania.

The campaign draws particular attention to the following areas of intervention: infection control, promoting effective diagnosis, improving prescribing practices and encouraging optimal use of antimicrobial agents.

Click here to download the 'Call to action' - brochure (PDF) in your language: 

Comic strips and illustrations

The comic strips and illustrations are aimed at reinforcing the various messages on containment. AMR containment requires collective action. The production of these comic strips and illustrations was possible through funding from the USAID supported SPS program of Management Sciences for Health. A total of 10 comic strips on antimicrobial resistance were developed. They are available to members on request. Please contact us for more information.
Click here to read the comic strip on community AMR awareness.

Back to top

Events

World Health Day on antimicrobial resistance
April 7th 2011 was World Health Day, an initiative of the WHO. This year, the theme was Antimicrobial Resistance. EPN actively took part in this day, as a partner of the national organizing committee in Kenya, together with the WHO, Government of Kenya (Department of Health Promotion) and other partners. Events were held at Riruta Health Centre in Dagoretti, Nairobi. A 16-page booklet with comic strips on Antimicrobial Resistance and other messages related to correct use of medicines, infection control and hygiene was developed and launched during this event.

Global Forum on Bacterial Infections
The Centre for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy is organizing the 1st Global Forum on Bacterial Infections in New Delhi, India, from October 3rd to 5th 2011. The meeting is intended for researchers to present new data on antibiotic access and resistance, and for policymakers, clinicians, public health programme managers and researchers to debate policy innovations in low- and middle-income countries.

Click on the below links to find out more and register for the forum:
http://www.cddep.org/globalforum
http://www.globalbacteria.org/

Back to top

Resources

Back to top

Read more:

 
20/05/2009: EPN and ReAct launch AMR campaign

Press release 

Ecumenical Pharmaceutical Network (EPN) and ReAct announce the launch of the Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) campaign: Fight AMR! Save medicines for our children.
Globally, infectious diseases kill 11 million people annually, 95% of whom live in resource constrained countries. The major life-saving intervention for infectious diseases is antimicrobial treatment. However, antimicrobial resistance is rapidly reducing the effectiveness of these life-saving medicines. In the past, medicine and science were able to stay ahead of this natural phenomenon through the discovery of potent new classes of antimicrobials, a process that flourished from 1930s to 1970s but has since slowed to a virtual standstill. For resource poor countries it is critical for useful agents to be preserved since there is no way that these countries can mobilize the resources for massive treatment of say Multi Drug Resistant (MDR) TB which costs up to 1400 times more to treat than susceptible TB. Immediate action is required in the current global context where 2.7 billion people or 43% of the world’s population live on less than USD 2 per day.

Numerous factors have contributed and continue to aggravate the problem including unnecessary prescribing of medicines by trained and untrained health workers, insufficient adherence to antimicrobial treatment by patients, uncontrolled dispensing by medicine vendors, widespread use of antimicrobial agents in animal husbandry and poor infection control practices. Research shows that half of medicines used in Africa are irrationally used and up to two thirds of antimicrobials, which are prescription only medicines being supplied over the counter.

The impact of AMR on individuals as well as on public health is enormous. Negative effects include increased morbidity and mortality, prolonged periods of infectiousness (and, consequently, increased risk of transmission of resistant pathogens to others), increased direct (longer hospital stay, use of more expensive 2nd or 3rd line drugs) and indirect (prolonged absence from work) costs.
In spite of the development of a global strategy by the World Health Organization in 2001 to address the issues of drug resistance, concerted and comprehensive action is still lacking. The reality of the current situation is that valuable agents will continue to be lost, leading to higher costs of health care and higher levels of morbidity and mortality associated with infectious diseases.

EPN and ReAct will launch the Fight AMR campaign on Wednesday 20th May 2009 in Geneva during the World Health Assembly. Simultaneously, local campaigns will take place in various countries across the world including Malawi, Moldova, Peru and Togo among others.

The campaign is intended to stimulate both global and local actors to take concrete action to address AMR. Political leaders, policy makers, funding agencies, health training institutions, health care providers, patients, the general public and the media all have a role to play in supporting and promoting rational use of medicines and other interventions that can be used to contain the development of resistance and save medicines for future generations.

EPN and ReAct appreciate the support of other partners including DIFAEMSida, the USAID supported SPS program of MSH and the Health and Healing program of the World Council of Churches (WCC).

Click here to see some pictures of the event. 

Back to top 

Revealing the hidden pandemic of antimicrobial resistance

While much attention of the World Health Assembly was given to Influenza A/H1N1, a worried microbiologist from Makerere University Uganda, presented the most shocking data on the consequences of the ongoing pandemic of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR). Almost half (28 of 62) of patients could not be treated with available antibiotics due to resistance against these medicines – 86% of these patients were newborns. “A significant number of these babies died” says Dr. Florence Najjuka. “10 years ago these lives could have been saved, but today the remaining treatment options are way too costly for most parents.”

Dr. Florence gave her presentation at the launch of the EPN/ReAct Fight AMR campaign at the World Health Assembly in Geneva on 20th May 2009. The launch brought together Country Delegates, WHO staff and Civil society and addressed the critical need of leadership and action to contain AMR. The participants realized that immediate action has to be taken on all levels, where governments have the ultimate responsibility. “Dr. Florence’s data are deeply worrying and they only show the tip of the iceberg”, says Professor Otto Cars, director of ReAct – Action on Antibiotic Resistance. “Complacency is no longer acceptable.”

The WHA launch was accompanied by events in a number of places around the world, for instance in India, Moldova, Togo, Tanzania and Malawi. These activities were carried out by member organizations of the Ecumenical Pharmaceutical Network (EPN) and targeted governments, health workers, kindergarten and school children as well as the general public.

In his concluding remarks, EPN-board chair Albert Petersen encouraged other civil society organizations to join EPN and ReAct in the Fight against AMR. To facilitate this, a web-based resource centre should be created. He also urged WHO to report back on the resolution that was passed four years ago (WHA 58.27) at the next World Health Assembly. We must act now to save medicines for our children!

Back to top 

Back to AMR Campaign  

 
10/11/2008: Moshi (Tanzania) workshop

From 10th to 14th November 2008, the kick-off for the AMR campaign was held at the Workshop on local and regional actions to address antimicrobial resistance in Moshi, Tanzania. 

  

Click here to read the press release: icon Moshi Press release (184 kB)

Below you can consult some of the presentations:  

Back to top 

Click here to download some of the workshop outputs (Word): 

Back to top 

Back to AMR Campaign 

 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 Next > End >>

Page 2 of 2

Campaign Partners