4.6 Review

Antibiotic Resistance: Moving From Individual Health Norms to Social Norms in One Health and Global Health

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01914

Keywords

One Health; Global Health; antibiotic resistance; waste water; farming

Categories

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [Spanish Network for Research on Infectious Diseases] [RD16/0016/0011]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity [BIO2017-83128-R]
  3. Autonomous Community of Madrid [B2017/BMD-3691]
  4. Joint Programming Initiative in Antimicrobial Resistance (JPIAMR Third call, STARCS) [JPIAMR2016-AC16/00039]
  5. Instituto de Salud Carlos III of Spain/Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
  6. European Development Regional Fund A way to achieve Europe (ERDF) [PI18/1942]
  7. CIBERESP (CIBER in Epidemiology and Public Health) [CB06/02/0053]
  8. Regional Government of Madrid (InGeMICS) [B2017/BMD-3691]
  9. Fundacion Ramon Areces

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Antibiotic resistance is a problem for human health, and consequently, its study had been traditionally focused toward its impact for the success of treating human infections in individual patients (individual health). Nevertheless, antibiotic-resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes are not confined only to the infected patients. It is now generally accepted that the problem goes beyond humans, hospitals, or long-term facility settings and that it should be considered simultaneously in human-connected animals, farms, food, water, and natural ecosystems. In this regard, the health of humans, animals, and local antibiotic-resistance-polluted environments should influence the health of the whole interconnected local ecosystem (One Health). In addition, antibiotic resistance is also a global problem; any resistant microorganism (and its antibiotic resistance genes) could be distributed worldwide. Consequently, antibiotic resistance is a pandemic that requires Global Health solutions. Social norms, imposing individual and group behavior that favor global human health and in accordance with the increasingly collective awareness of the lack of human alienation from nature, will positively influence these solutions. In this regard, the problem of antibiotic resistance should be understood within the framework of socioeconomic and ecological efforts to ensure the sustainability of human development and the associated human-natural ecosystem interactions.

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