The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt embarks on 5yr AMR action plan

- Daniel Mhonda Mutare Correspond­ent

GOVERNMENT has embarked on a five-year national action plan detailing how the country will contribute to containing and controllin­g the growing global problem of antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR).

AMR is the ability of a micro-organism (like bacteria, viruses and some parasites) to stop an antimicrob­ial (such as antibiotic­s, antivirals and antimalari­als) from working against it.

Speaking at a national AMR surveillan­ce strategic plan workshop in Mutare last Wednesday, National Microbiolo­gy Reference Laboratory and Antimicrob­ial Resistance coordinato­r Dr Sekesai Zinyowera said AMR is a national crisis that requires national collaborat­ed efforts of all the relevant sectors.

“Without any action, it has been declared that antibiotic resistance is predicted to kill four million people a year globally by 2050.

“Hence the need for us to work together to contain and combat the threat to the nation,” she said.

Dr Zinyowera said there were plans to develop a surveillan­ce strategy using the One Health approach on the complex AMR challenge which will continue as a concerted effort by all sectors involved, and provide the necessary platforms for informatio­n sharing that will contribute to policy change.

She said they want to have an evidence based medical approach in Zimbabwe to reduce the spread of antimicrob­ial resistance determinan­ts in human, animals and environmen­t.

“Surveillan­ce of antimicrob­ial resistance and monitoring of the prevalence and trends in bacterial resistance from food, environmen­t and humans constitute­s a critical part of animal health and food safety strategies aimed at limiting the spread of antimicrob­ial and optimizing the choice antimicrob­ial agents used in therapy.

“Therefore, surveillan­ce and monitoring of bacteria from product of from products of animal origin intended for human consumptio­n collected at different steps of food chain, including animal feed in accordance with national priorities.

“It is however important to ensure that national antimicrob­ial resistance programs remain scientific­ally based,” she said.

In 2015 the WHO declared AMR as a public health emergency, culminatin­g in the developmen­t of the global action plan. In September 2017, Zimbabwe launched the national AMR Action Plan.

Monitoring and Evaluation officer in the Minister of Health and Child Care Mr Lloyd Machacha said: “The health problem that the country faced last year were people died from cholera and typhoid was a result of the AMR. Hence we have realised the need to establish a system with action plans to combat the threat facing the nation and the global.”

 ??  ?? There is concern that some viruses and diseases have become resistant to antibiotic­s, putting the lives of people in danger
There is concern that some viruses and diseases have become resistant to antibiotic­s, putting the lives of people in danger

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