Tag: amr

  • Health Diplomacy in Fostering Regional Cooperation: From Access to Sustainable Solutions in health

    Health Diplomacy in Fostering Regional Cooperation: From Access to Sustainable Solutions in health

    World Health Summit Regional Meeting 

    25 April, 2025. 10.45-12.15 IST 

    Health Diplomacy in Fostering Regional Cooperation: From Access to Sustainable Solutions in Health  

    The Asia-Pacific region faces significant challenges from AMR, with high morbidity rates and projected economic costs of up to US$ 148 billion. These challenges are compounded by climate change and environmental factors that drive the spread of infectious and vector-borne diseases. Accelerating innovation and ensuring stewardship and fair access to AMR countermeasures, such as antimicrobials, diagnostics, and vaccines, is essential to provide an equitable response to the challenge and improve public health outcomes. In this context, this event convened stakeholders from industry, medical research institutions, not-for-profit organisations, and youth to elucidate the interplay between key global health challenges- AMR, climate change, and equitable access to healthcare products.

    The panel hosted by the Health Diplomacy Alliance opened with introductory remarks from Mrs. Katherine Urbáez, Executive Director of the Health Diplomacy Alliance, who also moderated the conversation. Mrs Katherine set the stage for focusing on AMR prevention and control, given the risks posed by climate change to the Asia Pacific region and highlighting the role of ensuring access and stewardship towards novel countermeasures. This was followed by a panel discussion wherein Mr Syed Ahmed, CEO, TechInvention Lifecare Ltd., shared the importance of technology transfer in the context of the recent pandemic agreement negotiations and provided examples of regional collaboration for vaccine manufacture using a One Health approach.

    Mr Madhav Joshi, CEO of the India Health Fund, shedding light on the market for AMR innovation in the Asia Pacific and communicating the role of health diplomacy in fostering an investment ecosystem for innovative diagnostics for preventing infectious diseases and AMR. In similar stride, Dr Vasan Sambandamurthy, Senior Vice President, Bugworks Research Inc., shared access centric research and development models for manufacturing novel broad-spectrum antibacterial agents and the role of AI in aiding drug discovery.

    Turning to the implementation of AMR National Action Plans, Dr Jyoti Joshi, Senior Science Advisor, The International Centre for Antimicrobial Resistance Solutions, shared experiences in executing a framework for access and stewardship of reserve antibiotics and highlighted the merits of AMR-climate change integrated strategies to address global challenges. Dr Kamini Walia, Senior Scientist, Indian Council of Medical Research, brought attention to the vital need for striking a balance between access and excess in the antimicrobial and diagnostic regulation, specifically in the context of developing policies towards emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases.

    The panel concluded with Ms Tanushree Jain, Chair of Working Group on Health Education and Literacy, WHO Youth Council, shared youth driven regional and global cooperation initiatives on Antimicrobial Resistance centred on a Planetary Health approach. Thus, by closely examining the synergies among priorities of AMR, climate change and access to health products, the discussion highlighted the necessity for an integrated, evidence-based approach that maximizes resource efficiency while aligning with high-level political commitments.

    Key Takeaways:

    • ⁠ ⁠Policies for infectious disease prevention and control must integrate AMR, climate change, and access to healthcare products.
    • ⁠ ⁠Advancing Universal Health Coverage in the Asia Pacific requires climate-resilient health systems.
    • ⁠ ⁠Regional collaboration and sharing best practices are essential to reduce the AMR burden.
    • ⁠ ⁠Healthcare innovation must be distributed equitably and guided by strong stewardship.
    • ⁠ ⁠Sustainable and effective use of healthcare products depend on balancing innovation, access, and stewardship.

  • 777 Campaign: World AMR Awareness Week 2025

    777 Campaign: World AMR Awareness Week 2025

    The 7-7-7 Campaign, was our flagship initiative for our World Antimicrobial Resistance Awareness Week (18–24 November 2025), engaging during 7 days, 7 actions and 7 group of stakeholders. Key events included flag displays on Pont du Mont-Blanc from 17 to 19 November, an awareness booth at Geneva Cornavin Main Train Station on 18 November, and the blue illumination of Geneva’s Jet d’Eau on 23 November. 

    Throughout the week, an online social media campaign ran with partners from various sectors and participants who amplified the campaign’s reach and highlighted their work related to AMR. 

    As a conclusion to WAAW 2025, the 2025 Global Intergenerational Dialogue on AMR took place on 24 November in collaboration with the Geneva Environment Network, underscoring the critical need for cross-sectoral collaboration to sustainably address AMR. 

    Pont -Du-Mont Blanc

    One of the most noticeable aspects of our 777 campaign was the deployment of the Alliance’s and the AMR campaign’s flags during November 17–19, 2025.

    On average, 55,000 cars, 14,500 pedestrians, and 6,500 cyclists pass through the Pont du Mont Blanc each day.

    This exceptionally high circulation, which included pedestrian traffic, private automobiles, public transportation, and active mobility users, made it the perfect setting for educating the Canton of Geneva’s citizens and passersby about AMR.

    Thousands of extremely diverse and energetic travelers saw the flags throughout the course of the three days, raising awareness of AMR and highlighting the importance of health diplomacy in public spaces.

    Train Station Booth

    A full-day AMR awareness stand at Gare Cornavin, the largest and busiest train station in Geneva, with more than 170,000 passengers passing through daily. Our objective was to engage directly with the people and raise awareness about antimicrobial resistance in an accessible way.  

    The stand featured: 

    • A large projection screen showing educational and informative content produced by us and the organizations that joined our 777 campaign
    • Distribution of educational and informative materials, including flyers, infographics, and factsheets.
    • An interview corner for short recordings with passersby and partners. 

     

     Throughout the day: 

    • We interacted with individuals of all ages in multiple languages to make our outreach inclusive (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese)
    • Many visitors learned about AMR for the first time 

    Social Media Campaign

    Over 7 days, we convened a social media campaign across our platforms to highlight 7 key actions from 7 stakeholder groups to reduce the global AMR burden.

    The actions included Infection Prevention and Control, Water Sanitation and Hygiene, stewardship, surveillance, innovation, R&D, manufacture, equitable access, One Health approach, evidence-based policy, financing, and health diplomacy.  

    The 7 stakeholder groups represented a whole-of-society approach to curbing the global health threat and included AMR Survivors, Health workers, Governments and Policy Makers, Civil society, philanthropy, academia, International Organizations, Private Sector, Media.

    The content spanned languages such as Maltese, English, Spanish, French, Hindi, Portuguese, Italian, and Malayalam

    The social media outreach from over 20 global organizations who participated in the campaign totalled 15,231 impressions, likes, reactions, and reposts.

    Jet d’Eau Ilumination

     

    The illumination of the Jet d’Eau in blue on 23 November was one of the key activities carried out as part of our 777 campaign.

    Lighting of the Jet d’Eau supports awareness of key issues, humanitarian emergencies, or highlights events organized in international Geneva. For WAAW2025, the Jet adorned itself in brilliant blue to illuminate the AMR challenge at the heart of the harbor.  

    This symbolic icon of the city of Geneva, lighting it in blue, raised visibility, strengthened public awareness, and encouraged collective action in support of the campaign’s goals to reduce the global burden on AMR. 

     

    2025 Intergenerational Dialogue on AMR

     

    Co-hosted by the Health Diplomacy Alliance and Geneva Environment Network, the 2025 Global Intergenerational Dialogue on AMR brought together speakers from Quadripartite and Youth led organizations and built on global momentum, amplified youth perspectives through dedicated surveys, fostered inter-generational exchanges of cross sectoral and cross regional success stories and highlighted actionable recommendations to embed inclusive One Health approach in global AMR governance. 

  • Science as Diplomacy: The Strategic Power of One Health in Global Policy

    Science as Diplomacy: The Strategic Power of One Health in Global Policy

    The One Health approach, which recognizes the interdependence of human, animal, and environmental health, is not only a matter of scientific collaboration but also a prime example of Science Diplomacy in action. Science Diplomacy goes beyond cooperation to engage science as a strategic diplomatic tool, capable of influencing global policies, easing geopolitical tensions, and fostering trust between nations with differing agendas. Through this lens, the One Health approach becomes a means of addressing complex and often contentious global challenges by leveraging scientific expertise in diplomatic negotiations, international treaties, and conflict resolution.

    The diplomatic role of science becomes evident in how scientific knowledge informs global health policies, mediates disputes, and fosters international trust. For instance, pandemic preparedness is not just about sharing research and data but also about aligning different national interests in a way that can prevent diplomatic rifts during crises. During the COVID-19 pandemic, for example, the distribution of vaccines, access to essential medicines, and the regulation of travel and trade became highly politicized. Scientific expertise, combined with diplomatic negotiation, helped to form frameworks like COVAX that sought to balance national interests with global health equity. This balance required science to be used as a diplomatic instrument, guiding international discussions toward a common understanding of the evidence and creating mutual agreements amidst political tension.

    Similarly, global efforts to combat antimicrobial resistance (AMR) highlight the diplomatic weight science carries in policy discussions. AMR is driven by practices in agriculture, healthcare, and environmental management that are influenced by economic interests, political priorities, and social norms in different countries. Here, science provides the common ground upon which diplomatic negotiations occur. Initiatives like the Global Action Plan on Antimicrobial Resistance, developed by WHO, FAO, and WOAH, were not just scientific collaborations but diplomatic triumphs—binding nations to a shared set of guidelines that balanced national sovereignty with the need for collective action. In this case, scientific evidence served as the backbone for treaty-making, where diplomatic negotiations turned scientific consensus into political commitments.

    The One Health approach to climate change and environmental degradation similarly exemplifies Science Diplomacy. Environmental health directly impacts national economies, food security, and public health, making it a politically charged issue. Here, science plays a diplomatic role by creating a neutral ground for dialogue between countries that may be at odds on other fronts. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), for example, has been instrumental in shaping the Paris Agreement. Through scientific assessments of climate change’s impact on ecosystems, agriculture, and human health, the IPCC’s work serves as a diplomatic bridge, ensuring that all parties—despite conflicting political or economic interests—base their negotiations on shared scientific understanding. Science thus becomes a tool not just for cooperation but for diplomatic consensus-building, helping to mediate conflicts over resource management, carbon emissions, and environmental responsibility.

    In the context of wildlife conservation and zoonotic disease surveillance, Science Diplomacy plays a role in preemptive conflict resolution. Zoonotic diseases, such as Ebola and avian influenza, often emerge from regions with significant biodiversity and sometimes weak governance structures. The risk of diseases spilling over into human populations can become a source of diplomatic tension between neighboring nations or trading partners. Science can act as a diplomatic intermediary by offering objective, evidence-based assessments of the risks and by establishing internationally recognized protocols for disease surveillance. This allows nations to resolve potential conflicts diplomatically before they escalate, with organizations such as the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA) providing platforms for scientific-diplomatic engagement. Rather than being a purely cooperative effort, this is a strategic use of science to negotiate boundaries, responsibilities, and shared risk.

    Food safety and food security provide further examples of the diplomatic role of science. Disputes over food standards, trade, and agricultural practices can create tension between nations, particularly when health and safety regulations differ. Science Diplomacy here is used to harmonize these standards while respecting national sovereignty, thus preventing potential trade wars or diplomatic standoffs. For example, the Codex Alimentarius Commission, a joint effort by WHO and FAO, plays a diplomatic role in mediating disagreements over food safety, using scientific evidence to broker consensus on what constitutes safe food practices. In this capacity, science is not just enabling cooperation but is driving diplomatic negotiation, ensuring that trade disputes do not escalate into larger geopolitical conflicts by grounding them in neutral, scientifically verifiable standards.

    In the broader context of environmental issues like biodiversity loss and pollution, science is used to establish common metrics for environmental impact assessments, which then feed into diplomatic negotiations for treaties like the Convention on Biological Diversity or the Montreal Protocol on substances that deplete the ozone layer. Science acts as a form of diplomatic currency in these discussions, allowing countries with divergent interests to engage in constructive dialogue based on mutually understood scientific principles. Diplomatic negotiations often hinge on the interpretation of scientific data, with science providing the means to translate complex environmental challenges into actionable policies, thus preventing potential conflicts over resource use and environmental degradation.

    In conclusion, the One Health approach is not just about scientific collaboration; it is a key arena for Science Diplomacy, where science plays a diplomatic role in shaping international policies, mediating disputes, and fostering global trust. By applying scientific principles in diplomatic contexts, nations can navigate the challenges of human, animal, and environmental health with greater clarity and consensus, ultimately leading to more effective and equitable global governance. In this sense, the diplomatic role of science in One Health goes beyond cooperation—it is about using scientific knowledge as a strategic tool to resolve conflicts, negotiate treaties, and build long-term, sustainable relationships between nations.

    About the author

     

    A Medical Doctor specializing in Urology, with advanced studies in International Cooperation, he has over 18 years of experience bridging science, health, and diplomacy. His career spans roles at UNESCO, where he led science policy and capacity-building projects, collaborated with the AAAS on science diplomacy, and secured European Commission funding for global partnerships. As Secretary General of EUGLOH, he advanced academic collaboration in global health, and currently, at OSH, he promotes sustainable One Health strategies, and at HDA, where he works on Science Diplomacy. His multidisciplinary expertise integrates clinical knowledge with international relations to address global health challenges through institutional and cross-sectoral collaboration.

  • From Jeddah to Geneva | Multilateralism Addressing Antimicrobial Resistance

    From Jeddah to Geneva | Multilateralism Addressing Antimicrobial Resistance

    This event is organized within the framework of the 2024 World Antimicrobial Resistance Awareness Week (WAAW) – a global campaign to raise awareness and understanding of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) and promote best practices among One Health stakeholders to reduce the emergence and spread of drug-resistant infections.

    About this Session

    Antimicrobial resistance is a critical and growing threat to human, and animal health, food security, environment, and development. AMR has been directly linked to 1.27 million global deaths and has contributed to 4.95 million deaths.

    During the last 79th United Nations General Assembly, 26 September, as part of the high-level week it was adopted a High-Level Political Declaration on AMR where the urgent need for global action against AMR, including the global target to reduce the misuse of antimicrobial and sustainable financial and innovation to combat AMR globally.

    As part of the ongoing efforts the Fourth Ministerial Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance will be hosted by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on 15-16 November in Jeddah, under the theme “From Declaration to Implementation – Accelerating Actions Through Multisectoral Partnerships for the Containment of AMR”. The conference, bringing together leaders to address urgent issues in preventing and managing AMR on a global scale, will be preceded by a side event day for non-state actors on 14 November.

    This event, organized as part of the World Antimicrobial Resistance Awareness Week (WAAW) from 18 to 24 November, will serve as a strategic gathering to advance commitments and build on the 4th Ministerial Conference and the work on AMR from international organizations and partners in Geneva International to accelerate the commitments on AMR, foster collaboration between the Quadripartite AMR organizations, UNEP, WHO, FAO, WOAH, the private sector, academia, and civil society to promote the integrated One Heath approach and evaluate the next steps and commitments that result from the meeting in Jeddah.

     

    Speakers

    H.E. Amb. Matthew WILSON

    Permanent Representative of Barbados to the United Nations Office and other international organizations in Geneva

    Jacqueline ALVAREZ

    Chief, Chemicals and Health Branch, UN Environment Programme

    Jean Pierre NYEMAZI

    Director a.i., Global Coordination and Partnership Department, AMR Division, World Health Organization

    Dominique BURGEON

    Director, Geneva Liaison Office, Food and Agriculture Organization

    Javier YUGUEROS-MARCOS

    Head of the Antimicrobial Resistance and Veterinary Products Department, World Organisation for Animal Health

    Judith MOORE

    Head, Access & Outcomes, Centre for Health and Healthcare, World Economic Forum

    Luka ŠROT

    Associate Director, Health Security, International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations

    Katherine URBAÉZ

    Founder and Executive Director, Health Diplomacy Alliance

    Wondwosen ASNAKE KIBRET

    Policy and Partnerships Coordinator, Europe Office, UN Environment Programme | Moderator

    Read more: Jeddah to Geneva

    Watch the recording: VIDEO

  • Go Blue Video Campaign – World AMR Awareness Week (WAAW)

    Go Blue Video Campaign – World AMR Awareness Week (WAAW)

    As part of the World Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Awareness Week 2024 – 18-24 November, we would like to invite you to contribute to our video series campaign.

    Your participation will be invaluable in raising awareness under this year’s theme: “Educate. Advocate. Act Now.”

    This campaign unites key stakeholders—high-level officials, including policymakers, healthcare practitioners, academics, civil society, AMR survivors, the private sector, and others—from various sectors and regions. It will emphasize the urgent actions outlined in the High-Level Political Declaration on AMR.

    We kindly request your contribution by sharing a short video (maximum 3 minutes) in your native or working language – GO BLUE ! with something blue (clothes, background, etc). A quote, reflection, or key message on AMR and its significance in your field or region for any of the following: 

    1. A personal call to educate and inspire others to join the global AMR fight, particularly in areas most relevant to your work
    2. The importance of advocacy and multisector cooperation.
    3. A clear call to action emphasizing the “Act Now” theme. If possible, refer to at least one important target or commitment of the 2024 Political Declaration and how to keep the Momentum.

    Please share your video  to communications@hdalliance.org or upload it to this folder https://tinyurl.com/WAAWHealthDiplo