Evaluation of antimicrobial resistance governance across 193 countries to inform the 2026 Global Action Plan update
Summary
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a major global health threat, yet the effectiveness of national action plans (NAPs) remains uncertain. Here we developed a multidimensional One Health governance index through a structured Delphi expert consultation to evaluate AMR governance across 193 countries (2017-2022), integrating 269 policy documents, expert-weighted indicators and multinational survey and surveillance datasets. Difference-in-differences and joinpoint regression analyses were us
Content
# Evaluation of antimicrobial resistance governance across 193 countries to inform the 2026 Global Action Plan update
*Published: 2026 Apr*
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a major global health threat, yet the
effectiveness of national action plans (NAPs) remains uncertain. Here we
developed a multidimensional One Health governance index through a structured
Delphi expert consultation to evaluate AMR governance across 193 countries
(2017-2022), integrating 269 policy documents, expert-weighted indicators and
multinational survey and surveillance datasets. Difference-in-differences and
joinpoint regression analyses were used to link governance to antimicrobial use,
AMR prevalence and AMR-related mortality. Global governance scores improved from
30.7 to 44.5/100, although implementation and monitoring lagged behind policy
design, particularly in animal and environmental sectors. A significant increase
in AMR prevalence scores was observed only 5 years after NAP adoption (two-stage
difference-in-differences, β = 2.43, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.02-3.85, P <
0.05), underscoring the delayed impact of policy. Multisector engagement
(early-adopting countries, β = 0.05, 95% CI 0.02-0.08, P < 0.01) and
antimicrobial use surveillance system (early-adopting countries, β = 0.05, 95%
CI 0.03-0.07, P < 0.01) showed the strongest associations with improvement in
AMR outcomes. As the 2026 Global Action Plan update approaches, sustained
financing and integrated One Health surveillance, with stronger environmental
and agricultural engagement, are essential for translating NAPs into sustained
reductions in resistance.
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-026-04257-1