| 23 Juillet 2018
Countries are making significant steps in tackling antimicrobial  resistance (AMR), but serious gaps remain and require urgent action,  according to a report released today by the Food and Agriculture  Organization of the United Nations (FAO), World Organisation for Animal  Health (OIE) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
 
 The report charts progress in 154 countries and reveals wide  discrepancies. Some, including many European countries, have been  working on  AMR policies in human and animal sectors for more than 4  decades. Others have only recently started to take action to contain  this growing threat. Progress in developing and implementing plans is  greater in high-income than low-income countries but all countries have  scope for improvement. No country reports sustained capacity at scale  in all areas.
 
 The report looks at surveillance, education, monitoring and regulating  consumption and use of antimicrobials in human health, animal health and  production, as well as plants and the environment – as recommended in  the Global Action Plan published in 2015.
 
 Promising findings include 105 countries with a surveillance system in  place for reporting drug-resistant infections in human health and 68  countries with a system for tracking consumption of antimicrobials. In  addition, 123 countries reported that they have policies to regulate the  sale of antimicrobials, including the requirement of a prescription for  human use – a key measure to tackle overuse and misuse of  antimicrobials.
But implementation of these policies varies and unregulated medicines  are still available in places such as street markets, with no limits on  how they are used. Medicines are very often sold over the counter and no  prescription is requested. This puts human and animal health at risk,  potentially contributing to the development of antimicrobial resistance.
 
 The report highlights areas, particularly in the animal and food  sectors, where there is an urgent need for more investment and action.  For example, only 64 countries report that they follow FAO-OIE-WHO  recommendations to limit the use of critically important antimicrobials  for growth promotion in animal production. Of these, 39 are high-income  countries, with the majority in WHO’s European Region. By contrast, only  3 countries from WHO’s African Region and 7 countries from the WHO  Region of the Americas have taken this important step to reduce the  emergence of antimicrobial resistance.
 
 A total of 67 countries report at least having legislation in place to  control all aspects of production, licensing and distribution of  antimicrobials for use in animals. But 56 either said that they had no  national policy or legislation regarding the quality, safety and  efficacy of antimicrobial products used in animal and plant health, and  their distribution, sale or use, or that they were unable to report  whether they have these policies in place.
 
 There is also a substantial lack of action and data in the environment  and plant sectors. Although 78 countries have regulations in place to  prevent environmental contamination generally, only 10 of them report  having comprehensive systems to ensure regulatory compliance for all  waste management, including regulations that limit the discharge of  antimicrobial residues into the environment. This is insufficient to  protect the environment from the hazards of antimicrobial production.
 
 “This report shows growing global momentum to combat antimicrobial  resistance,” says Dr Ranieri Guerra, Assistant Director-General for  Antimicrobial Resistance at WHO. “We call on governments to make  sustained commitments across all sectors – human and animal health,  plant health and the environment – otherwise we risk losing the use of  these precious medicines.”
 
 “Supporting low- and middle-income countries to follow guidance of  responsible and prudent use of antimicrobials in animals is an urgent  priority,” says Dr Matthew Stone, Deputy Director General of the World  Organisation for Animal Health (OIE). “Implementation of dedicated OIE  international standards, appropriate national legislation and  strengthening of veterinary services are essential steps to help all  animal health stakeholders contribute to controlling the threat posed by  antimicrobial resistance.”
 
 “FAO welcomes that many countries are taking concrete steps towards the  responsible use of antimicrobials in agriculture,” says Maria Helena  Semedo, FAO Deputy Director-General. “However, countries need to do more  to reduce the unregulated and excessive use of antimicrobials in  agriculture. We particularly urge countries to phase out the use of  antimicrobials for growth promotion in animal production – terrestrial  and aquatic.”
 
 From this survey and other sources, the Tripartite (FAO, OIE and WHO) is  aware that 100 countries now have national action plans for AMR in  place and a further 51 countries have plans under development, but more  needs to be done to ensure that they are implemented. Only 53 countries  report that they have a multisectoral working group that is fully  functional, although a further 77 have established such a group. Only 10  countries report that the funding for all actions in the plan is  identified and many middle- and low-income countries may need long-term  development assistance to implement their plans effectively and  sustainably. Positively, among the top ten chicken-, pork- and  cattle-producing countries that responded to the AMR survey, 9 out of 10  have at minimum developed a national action plan; the majority of these  have plans in operation with a monitoring arrangement.
 
 About the survey
 The global Tripartite survey of country progress in addressing AMR is  part of monitoring implementation of the Global Action Plan on AMR,  which was endorsed by WHO and FAO Member States, and OIE Member  Countries in 2015 .
 The survey is developed and issued jointly by the three Organizations  and the report analyses the data from year two of the survey.
 The 2018 survey received responses from 154 countries (out of 194 of WHO  Member States contacted). All countries’ responses from both years are  published in an open-access database, offering scope for in-country  review with civil society and other stakeholders.