4.3 Article

A Pandemic Instrument Can Start Turning Collective Problems into Collective Solutions by Governing the Common-Pool Resource of Antimicrobial Effectiveness

Journal

JOURNAL OF LAW MEDICINE & ETHICS
Volume 50, Issue -, Pages 17-25

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jme.2022.75

Keywords

Antimicrobial Resistance; Common-Pool Resources; Equity; Governance; Collective Action

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To address the challenge of global antimicrobial resistance, a pandemic treaty should include mechanisms for addressing access gap, conserving antimicrobials, financing new technologies, and establishing infection prevention measures. Lessons from biodiversity, climate, and nuclear governance can be applied.
To address the complex challenge of global antimicrobial resistance (AMR), a pandemic treaty should include mechanisms that 1) equitably address the access gap for antimicrobials, diagnostic technologies, and alternative therapies; 2) equitably conserve antimicrobials to sustain effectiveness and access across time and space; 3) equitably finance the investment, discovery, development, and distribution of new technologies; and 4) equitably finance and establish greater upstream and midstream infection prevention measures globally. Biodiversity, climate, and nuclear governance offer lessons for addressing these challenges.

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