Effective Surveillance

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR)

AMR develops when bacteria, fungi or viruses are exposed to antibiotics, antifungals or antivirals. As a result, the antimicrobials become ineffective and infections may persist. In addition, medical interventions including surgery, chemotherapy and stem cell therapy may become impossible.
AMR is considered the biggest global threat of Health and Food Safety.

AMR Insights

For Officers at authorities, ministries, international organisations and NGO’s who wish to prevent the further global spreading of Antimicrobial resistance, AMR Insights offers selected, global information and data, specific education and extensive networking and partnering opportunities. 

AMR Insights is for:

  • Senior officials and (top) civil servants at national authorities
  • Policy Officers at Ministries
  • Civil servants at regional authorities
  • Senior officials at international organizations
  • Senior officials at NGO’s

Latest Topics

  •   22 December 2025

    Global Prediction of Antimicrobial Resistance Trends Using Statistical and Machine Learning Models: Evaluating National Action Plan Policy Impacts Through Interrupted Time Series Analysis

    The study presents a data-driven global analysis of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), using statistical and machine learning models to forecast AMR trends and evaluate the effects of national action plans on resistance patterns. Clinical isolate data from 65 countries were analysed, revealing that AMR burdens are highest in low- and middle-income regions, particularly in Southeast Asia […]

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  •   16 December 2025

    New tools saved a million lives from malaria last year but progress under threat as drug resistance rises

    WHO’s latest World Malaria Report shows that wider use of new prevention tools — including dual-ingredient bed nets, malaria vaccines and expanded chemoprevention — helped avert an estimated 170 million malaria cases and 1 million deaths in 2024. Since the first WHO-approved malaria vaccines in 2021, 24 countries have introduced them into routine immunisation, while […]

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  •   16 December 2025

    The Silent Spread of Resistance: Global Patterns of CRE Colonization across Healthcare and Community Settings

    This systematic review and meta-analysis of 89 studies involving 116,743 participants estimates the global prevalence of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) colonization at 14%, with substantial heterogeneity across studies. Prevalence peaked in 2017 (33%) and declined to 8% by 2023, with marked geographic variation—highest in Vietnam (43%) and lowest in the United States (5%). Colonization was significantly […]

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