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Antimicrobial resistance has become a global threat, impacting both humans and animals, in the survival against an ever-increasing range of bacterial infections. For food producers, the bigger question is on ensuring the sustainability of food production: How can food be produced in a way that doe...
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) became in the last two decades a global threat to public health systems in the world. Since the antibiotic era, with the discovery of the first antibiotics that provided consistent health benefits to human medicine, the misuse and abuse of antimicrobials in...
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the World Health Organization's most urgent health challenges for the next decade. While AMR is a global threat, a tale of two worlds emerges, highlighting the heightened vulnerability of low- and middle-income co
ising Global Threat Sally Davies: Antimicrobial Resistance: A Rising Global ThreatSally Davies: Antimicrobial Resistance: A Rising Global Threat
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global threat gaining more and more practical significance every year. The main determinants of AMR are the antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs). Since bacteria can share genetic components via horizontal gene transfer, even non-pathogenic bacteria may provide ARG ...
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR), universally recognized as one of the most serious public health challenges of the twenty-first century [1], has grown into a global pandemic that poses a threat to human health and well-being, including health care, food production, and life expectancy [2]. Acc...
Antimicrobial resistance constitutes a global burden and is one of the major threats to public health. Although the emergence of resistant microorganisms is a natural phenomenon, selection is driven by an excessive or inappropriate use of antimicrobials in health care and agricultural settings. With ...
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an important topic that affects the health of humans and animals globally.AMR is defined as the inability or reduced ability of an antimicrobial agent to inhibit the growth of a bacterium, which, in the case of a pathogenic organism, can lead to therapy fa...
Antimicrobial resistance is a well-recognized global threat; thus, the development of strong infection control policies coupled with antimicrobial stewardship strategies and new therapies is required to reverse this process. In its 2013 report on antimicrobial resistance, the Centers for Disease Control an...