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A new University-wide network on antimicrobial resistance aims to generate novel research and collaborations to tackle one of the most urgent global health threats.

Bacteria petri dishes © Getty Images

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) threatens the foundation of modern medicine and is described by the  World Health Organization as one of the top global public health and development threats. It occurs when bacteria and other disease-causing microbes gain the ability to resist the action of treatments designed to kill them.

AMR has led to at least one million deaths each year since 1990 and is expected to cause another 39 million deaths between now and 2050. AMR is directly related to 16 of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals, with severe negative implications for poverty, gender inequality, animal welfare, the environment, and food security.

In response to this far-reaching threat, the newly established Oxford AMR Network harnesses the University of Oxford’s considerable expertise in life sciences, medical and social sciences, and humanities to tackle this challenge through multiple approaches.

There are over 200 researchers working to tackle AMR across Oxford. Their work spans new drug discovery and antibiotic stewardship, to development of diagnostic tools and AMR surveillance and epidemiology.

Funded and hosted by the Ineos Oxford Institute for antimicrobial research (IOI), the network will mobilise Oxford University’s expertise in AMR to facilitate new collaborations and generate novel research to find solutions. A new database will list researchers across the university whose wide-ranging expertise exemplifies the vast array of world-leading research from Oxford teams, including overseas units in the MORU Tropical Health Network and the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit OUCRU).

 

Read the full story on the University of Oxford website.