posted on 2025-11-07, 09:04authored byGerald BloomGerald Bloom, Christopher Dowson, David McKinney, Priya Balasubramaniam
<p dir="ltr">Ten years ago, the O’Neill Review on Antimicrobial Resistance called for a major effort to discover and develop new antimicrobials. It outlined a strategy for achieving this through a combination of “push” and “pull” incentives and, importantly, measures to reduce the cost of antimicrobial development. The UK has played an important role in mobilising a global effort to implement this strategy. A lot of progress has been made, but the current situation does not match the expressed ambition.</p><p dir="ltr">Recent developments in the science and technology capabilities of several middle-income countries and their pharmaceutical sectors, including in research and development, are creating new opportunities for implementing a strategy that could enable sustainable and affordable antimicrobial discovery, development and manufacturing. This would entail new kinds of international partnership based on the principle of shared commitment to contribute to a global public good but with differentiated responsibilities. The UK is well-placed to continue its catalytic role within international leadership, but a more systematic and implementable approach is required at national and cross-national levels.</p>
History
Publisher
LEAD: Leadership in Enhancing Antimicrobial Discovery
Citation
Bloom, G.; Dowson, C.; McKinney, D.; and Balasubramaniam, P. (2025) ‘International Partnerships for Low-Cost Antimicrobial Discovery and Development’, LEAD Policy Brief 2, LEAD: Leadership in Enhancing Antimicrobial Discovery, DOI: 10.19088/LEAD.2025.002