TY - JOUR
T1 - Antimicrobial resistance burden estimates from the bottom-up
T2 - research priorities for estimating the impact of antimicrobial resistance in Brazil
AU - Keenan, Katherine
AU - Kiffer, Carlos Roberto Veiga
AU - Carmo, Erico V.S.
AU - Corrêa, Juliana Silva
AU - de Abreu, Andre Luis
AU - Massuda, Adriano
AU - Gales, Ana Christina
AU - Colombo, Arnaldo Lopes
AU - Institute of Antimicrobial Resistance of São Paulo (ARIES) group
N1 - Funding: KK was funded by a 3-month Visiting Professor award from the Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education (CAPES) (88887.900085/2023-00). EC is also an employee of Sanofi. JSC was funded by a fellowship provided by CNPQ (151272/2023-9) and The State of São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) (2023/09515-5). This work was supported by the Sao Paulo Research Foundation-funded ARIES Project (FAPESP Grant 2021/10599-3).
PY - 2025/3/1
Y1 - 2025/3/1
N2 - Recent estimates of deaths attributable to bacterial antimicrobial resistance (AMR) highlight the immense public health threat of AMR to healthcare systems, economies, and communities in Latin America. Although global modelling studies generate important statistics to motivate and guide global and national agendas, their complex methodology and aggregation mean that they have a more limited impact at the local scales where AMR is experienced and tackled. At the same time, it is increasingly recognised that we need to study and design AMR policies ‘from the bottom-up’, drawing on data and perspectives that ensure local ownership of the research and policy agenda. But how do we integrate ‘bottom-up’ perspectives into AMR burden estimation? Brazil is used as a case study to illustrate the importance of this approach. Brazil's vast and decentralised healthcare system would benefit from robust regional estimates of AMR's clinical, economic, and social burdens to move political decision-making and design appropriate interventions. We report on recommendations gathered from interdisciplinary stakeholder exercises and propose strategic priorities for estimating the AMR burden in Brazil at subnational scales of governance. These include focusing on individual-level data linkages at various scales; capturing public and private healthcare systems; understanding AMR inequalities; and capturing linked clinical, economic, and social burdens.
AB - Recent estimates of deaths attributable to bacterial antimicrobial resistance (AMR) highlight the immense public health threat of AMR to healthcare systems, economies, and communities in Latin America. Although global modelling studies generate important statistics to motivate and guide global and national agendas, their complex methodology and aggregation mean that they have a more limited impact at the local scales where AMR is experienced and tackled. At the same time, it is increasingly recognised that we need to study and design AMR policies ‘from the bottom-up’, drawing on data and perspectives that ensure local ownership of the research and policy agenda. But how do we integrate ‘bottom-up’ perspectives into AMR burden estimation? Brazil is used as a case study to illustrate the importance of this approach. Brazil's vast and decentralised healthcare system would benefit from robust regional estimates of AMR's clinical, economic, and social burdens to move political decision-making and design appropriate interventions. We report on recommendations gathered from interdisciplinary stakeholder exercises and propose strategic priorities for estimating the AMR burden in Brazil at subnational scales of governance. These include focusing on individual-level data linkages at various scales; capturing public and private healthcare systems; understanding AMR inequalities; and capturing linked clinical, economic, and social burdens.
KW - Antimicrobial resistance
KW - Brazil
KW - Clinical burden
KW - Study design
KW - Policy
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijregi.2024.100558
DO - 10.1016/j.ijregi.2024.100558
M3 - Article
SN - 2772-7076
VL - 14
JO - IJID Regions
JF - IJID Regions
M1 - 100558
ER -