4.6 Article

Antimicrobial Resistance Research Collaborations in Asia: Challenges and Opportunities to Equitable Partnerships

Journal

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11060755

Keywords

antimicrobial resistance; AMR research; collaborative research; equal partnerships; power relations; Asia

Funding

  1. [CoSTAR-HS/ARGSeedGrant/2019/01]
  2. [NMRC/CG/C026/2017_NUHS]

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This study aimed to identify and understand the challenges and opportunities for collaborative antimicrobial resistance (AMR) research in Asia. Factors influencing research collaborations were found to be the multi-dimensional nature of AMR, limited funds, different AMR research priorities in Asian countries, absence of Asia-centric AMR leadership, lack of trust and unequal power relationships between researchers, and the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The study also highlighted opportunities such as researchers' willingness to collaborate, the formation of networks, and the prioritization of the One Health paradigm for AMR research.
Antimicrobial Resistance is recognized as a major threat to global health security. The WHO Southeast Asia region is dubbed a global hub for AMR emergence, as it runs the highest risk for AMR emergence among all WHO regions in Asia. Hence, there is a need for Asia-centric, collaborative AMR research aligned with the true needs and priorities of the region. This study aimed to identify and understand the challenges and opportunities for such collaborative endeavors to enhance equitable partnerships. This qualitative study adopted an interpretative approach involving a thematic analysis of 15 semi-structured interviews with AMR experts conducting research in the region. The study identified several factors influencing research collaborations, such as the multi-dimensional nature of AMR, limited or lack of funds, different AMR research priorities in Asian countries, absence of Asia-centric AMR leadership, lack of trust and, unequal power relationships between researchers, and the negative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in research collaborations. It also identified some opportunities, such as the willingness of researchers to collaborate, the formation of a few networks, and the prioritization by many academics of the One Health paradigm for framing AMR research. Participants reported that the initiation of stronger cross-discipline and cross-country networks, the development of Asia-centric AMR leadership, flexible research agendas with shared priorities, transparent and transferable funds, and support to enhance research capacity in LMICs could assist in developing more equitable collaborative research in Asia.

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