Antimicrobial resistance threatens the very core of modern medicine and the sustainability of an effective, global public health response to the enduring threat from infectious diseases. Effective antimicrobial drugs are prerequisites for both preventive and curative measures, protecting patients from potentially fatal diseases and ensuring that complex procedures, such as surgery and chemotherapy, can be provided at low risk. Yet systematic misuse and overuse of these drugs in human medicine and food production have put every nation at risk. Few replacement products are in the pipeline. Without harmonized and immediate action on a global scale, the world is heading towards a post-antibiotic era in which common infections could once again kill.
United Nations Environment Programme
- Who we are
- Where we work
-
What we do
- Air quality
- Biosafety
- Cities
- Digital Transformations
- Disasters and conflicts
- Energy
- Environment under review
- Environmental law and governance
- Extractives
- Food Systems
- Forests
- Fresh Water
- Gender
- Green economy
- Ocean, seas and coasts
- Resource efficiency
- Sustainable Development Goals
- Transport
- Youth, education and environment
- Publications & data