Unless you have been living under a rock (鈥), you will have heard about the UN General Assembly鈥檚 (UNGA) High-Level Meeting on AMR, which took place on 26th鈥疭eptember, and to which organisations around the world have spent the last fortnight responding. But unless you work in global鈥痯olicy, you could be forgiven for wondering鈥痺hat鈥疷NGA is, and more importantly,鈥痺hy鈥痠t is so important for you and your AMR research.
What even鈥痠s鈥痶he UNGA?
The UNGA is an annual event, usually in September, where the 193 UN member countries meet to discuss, debate, and tackle global issues. There are a week鈥檚 worth of meetings, and there is usually one headline topic from all the global health priorities, usually decided years in advance 鈥 at this year鈥檚 79th鈥疷NGA, the High Level Meeting (HLM) was on AMR. It is the second time in history that the topic has been AMR (the first was in 2016). There were also a couple other HLMs this year, including one on climate change. The outcome of UNGA is usually a commitment of some sort; this year, UNGA issued a鈥痗ommitting to 鈥榮tep up action against antimicrobial resistance鈥.鈥 The political declaration is not a surprise; there has been a publicly available draft since May 2024, so we have known that there would be focus on items such as: targets, vaccines, diagnostics, novel antibiotics, and 鈥 especially in areas of the world where antibiotic access is not ensured - access.
Global leaders typically vote on the political declaration to 鈥榓pprove鈥 it; this year, the declaration that was approved had some key One Health aims, including:
路鈥疉 target to reduce deaths associated with bacterial AMR by 10% by 2030.
路鈥$100 million USD in funding to help achieve a target of 60% of countries having funded National Action Plans.
路鈥70% of antibiotics used for human health should belong to the鈥疻HO 鈥楢ccess鈥 category.
路鈥疪educe antimicrobials in the agri-food systems
路鈥疨revent and address the discharge of antimicrobials into the environment
路鈥疉nd many more
鈥極k but I don鈥檛 do global policy research,鈥痙oes this matter for me?鈥
Yes. High Level Meetings can change national and international priorities, governments鈥 commitments 鈥 and funding. Though they are not legally binding, 鈥渂y expressing a 鈥榳orld opinion鈥, [declarations] can thus exert considerable pressure for states to take this opinion into account, especially when conducting their domestic or foreign affairs鈥, as it says in鈥痜rom 2016 on how UN resolutions work (which I鈥檇 recommend if your international relations needs a bit of a brush-up鈥). 鈥疭o, what does this mean for you? In the coming years, your research topics might have a sudden spotlight shining on them, or conversely, you may be at risk of losing out on funding if you can鈥檛 show how it relates (directly or indirectly) to high-level global AMR research priorities. More importantly, though, there is a value in knowing how research, policy, and practice will all come together to answer the bigger questions; in theory, this should generate the biggest impact! For example, there will certainly be a need for evidence generation for AMR interventions, which will be critical if there is to be movement to the 鈥10% reduction鈥 target, so researchers might want to consider how their work can contribute to that.
鈥楾hat is pretty generic, isn鈥檛 it?鈥
Yes and no. The political declarations can read as 'defanged' because, for all of 2024, governments, organisations, civil society, and many other people and groups have been lobbying heavily for the inclusion of certain messages. To make sure member countries buy into a global plan, there does have to be something in it for everyone. 鈥疐or some organisations, like the World Bank, aligning the AMR research agenda to鈥痟as been important; for others, like BIVDA and CARBX, stimulating鈥痮谤鈥痟as been the main aim.鈥
鈥淥K, so what does this mean for me and my research?鈥
You can learn more about AMR targets, the UNGA political declaration, and how to access, analyse, and get a handle on the quantitative data needed to address the UNGA commitments at our LSHTM AMR Centre鈥檚 Data Symposium on 21 October.鈥 Register鈥here.
The EU鈥檚 response to the UNGA political declaration is here:鈥痑nd the Rt Hon David Lammy's speech at UNGA can be found here, for the UK:鈥
LSHTM's short courses provide opportunities to study specialised topics across a broad range of public and global health fields. From AMR to vaccines, travel medicine to clinical trials, and modelling to malaria, refresh your skills and join one of our short courses today.