Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global health crisis that affects all life on Earth. In 2015, the World Health Organization developed guidance to combat AMR in accordance with a One Health framework considering human, animal, and environment sectors of planetary health. This study reviewed global guidance and 25 National Action Plans to evaluate thematic priorities in One Health AMR approaches using a novel framework that additionally facilitated the identification of water-related stewardship gaps, as water resources are recognized as the primary environmental AMR reservoir and dissemination pathway. This review found that global and national stewardship primarily focuses on mitigating antibiotic use in the human and animal sectors, overlooking environmental drivers, particularly diverse environmental waters. The findings of this study highlight the need to broaden the scope of water-related AMR concerns beyond water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) infrastructure for water supply and wastewater treatment, and account for environmental waters in AMR development and dissemination, particularly in low-income countries where half a billion people rely on environmental waters to meet daily needs. Equitably accounting for water environments, supplies, and waste in AMR prevention, mitigation, surveillance, and innovation can significantly enhance the integration of environmental objectives in One Health AMR stewardship.

Highlights

  • Antibiotic resistance is a natural evolutionary process in microbials, but the improper and overuse of antibiotics are accelerating this process and threatening human health and well-being

  • A selection of 25 National Action Plans (NAP) were evaluated for antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and water-related AMR stewardship to analyze global AMR thematic priorities and gaps using the One Health-One Water AMR stewardship framework developed in this study (Figure S1: One Health-One Water framework NAP evaluation results)

  • NAPs were selected if (1) participated in the Tripartite AMR Country Self-Assessment Survey (TrACSS), (2) NAP is active at the time (2021) of the review, (3) available in English, (4) accessible online, and (5) included water-related terminology

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Summary

Introduction

Antibiotic resistance is a natural evolutionary process in microbials, but the improper and overuse of antibiotics are accelerating this process and threatening human health and well-being. Increased antimicrobial resistance (AMR) exposure from animals and food supplies further exacerbates human AMR risk. As a result of anthropogenic contamination, AMR organisms have especially been detected in environmental soils and waters, including surface and groundwater [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9], as a result of antibiotic use in agriculture, aquaculture, pharmaceutical production, and human use. The environment is considered a major AMR reservoir and dissemination pathway given human exposure through direct consumption of food products and water supplies [22,23], and exposure through contaminated soil and the broader environment [24]

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