Context:
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India has introduced its second National Action Plan on Antimicrobial Resistance (NAP-AMR) in response to the slow and uneven implementation of the first plan and the rapid rise in antibiotic-resistant infections.
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The revised plan strengthens the ‘One Health’ approach, recognising AMR as a human, animal, and environmental health challenge.
Key Highlights:
AMR Burden in India
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In 2023, nearly one in three bacterial infections in India showed resistance to commonly used antibiotics.
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High resistance observed in:
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E. coli
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Klebsiella pneumoniae
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These pathogens are resistant to critical and last-resort antibiotics, raising treatment costs and mortality risks.
Limitations of the First National Action Plan
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Successfully raised awareness on AMR.
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Expanded national AMR surveillance networks.
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Banned Colistin as a growth promoter in animal husbandry.
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However, implementation was weak due to:
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Inadequate Centre–State coordination
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Limited inter-sectoral collaboration
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One Health Approach Strengthened
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Recognises AMR spread across:
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Human health systems
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Veterinary practices
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Agriculture and aquaculture
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Soil and water ecosystems
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Promotes integrated surveillance and policy action across sectors.
State-Level Evidence
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Kerala recorded a modest decline in AMR levels after implementing state-specific antibiotic policies, demonstrating the value of decentralised action.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Issue: Escalating antimicrobial resistance threatening public health.
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Causes:
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Overuse and misuse of antibiotics
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High infectious disease burden
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Weak surveillance and regulation
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Government Initiatives:
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National Action Plan on AMR
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Ban on Colistin in animal feed
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Key Concepts:
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AMR: Microorganisms resisting antimicrobial drugs
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One Health: Integrated human–animal–environment health approach
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Impact:
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Increased treatment failures
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Higher healthcare costs
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Relevant Mains Points:
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Science & Public Health Dimension:
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AMR undermines gains of modern medicine, surgeries, and immunocompromised care
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Threatens achievement of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 3)
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Governance & Social Justice Perspective:
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Poor and vulnerable populations disproportionately affected due to limited access to advanced treatment
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Need for strong regulatory oversight on antibiotic sales and prescriptions
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Environmental Dimension:
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Antibiotic residues in water bodies and soil accelerate resistance development
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Calls for stricter waste management in pharma and hospital sectors
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Way Forward:
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Strengthen antibiotic stewardship programmes in hospitals
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Mandate state-level AMR action plans
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Improve surveillance through digital integration
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Promote public awareness and rational drug use
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Enforce One Health coordination mechanisms institutionally
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 3: Science & Technology, Public Health, Environment
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GS 2: Governance, Social Justice, Health Policy
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Prelims: AMR, One Health, Antibiotic Stewardship
