India has reaffirmed its commitment to combat antimicrobial resistance (AMR) at the 79th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) high-level meeting on AMR, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said on Friday.
Addressing
the gathering of global leaders, Union Minister of State for Health and Family
Welfare Anupriya Patel called for urgently integrating AMR containment
strategies in various health programmes.
Patel also
highlighted the urgent need for global cooperation to address the growing
threat of AMR.
"AMR poses a
critical threat to global public health undermining decades of progress made in
the field of modern medicine," said Patel.
AMR occurs when
bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites no longer respond to medicines. This
leads to infections becoming difficult or impossible to treat, increasing the
risk of disease spread, severe illness, and death.
"Urgent
integration of AMR containment strategies into the various health
programmes" is the need of the hour, the MoS added.
She called for the
inclusion of AMR strategies in programmes that focus "on pandemic
preparedness, health system strengthening and universal health coverage with
the focus of resource utilisation more on prevention and mitigation than
surveillance".
The Union Minister
also highlighted India's significant strides in combating AMR since the launch
of its National Action Plan (NAP AMR) in April 2017.
She underscored
the progress made in expanding surveillance networks both in the human and
animal sectors. This includes reducing hospital-acquired infections by
improving infection prevention and control and promoting responsible
antimicrobial use across human and animal health sectors.
Under the Clean
India Mission, the country's sanitation, hygiene, and infection control in
healthcare facilities has significantly improved, the MoS said.
In addition,
"a nationwide systematic and standardised surveillance of
healthcare-associated infections (HAI) has been initiated in the country,"
Patel said, adding that regulations have been made to "ensure
prescription-based sales of antimicrobials".
The UNGA was
informed that India has developed an Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS) programme
to reduce unnecessary antibiotic prescriptions and combat rising AMR.
"India
remains fully committed to addressing the AMR challenge," Patel said while
calling for collective work to "mitigate the risks posed by AMR and
safeguard the future of public health worldwide".
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