The Quadripartite Technical Group on the Economics of Antimicrobial Resistance

The Quadripartite Technical Group on the Economics of Antimicrobial Resistance

About

Tackling AMR requires not only understanding it as a biological phenomenon but also understanding how it affects our economies over time. It is by being able to gauge the magnitude of AMR’s economic impact that political/global leaders can compare this problem to other pressing concerns and take action. The Quadripartite is ideally placed to explore this issue given its expertise across all of the relevant sectors. As such, the economics of AMR is a key priority within the Quadripartite mandate. 

The Technical Group (QTG-EA) advises the Quadripartite Organizations and the Global Leaders Group on AMR on the costs imposed by AMR and the benefits reaped in tackling it across the One Health settings – human health, animal health, environmental health, agri-food, and plant health.

The QTG-EA is made up of 20 experts from across the globe.

Core Areas of Work

The work of the Quadripartite on the Economics of AMR is made up of four main components:

  • Estimating the economic cost of AMR
  • Defining a package of priority interventions and policies across One Health sectors
  • Calculating the return on investment from tackling AMR through targeted interventions and policies
  • Creating a toolbox for countries to compare and choose amongst interventions and policies to tackle AMR, and to assess the economic rationale underpinning their implementation

 

 

Members

Yasser Mahmmod

Biography

Yasser Mahmmod is a veterinary specialist, with particular focus on applied epidemiology, One Health, and animal infectious diseases. His doctoral studies were on cattle health and contagious mastitis epidemiology, while his masters focused on the epidemiology of tick-borne diseases. Dr. Mahmmod has worked as a Marie-Sklodowska Curie Research Fellow on the interactions between the animal microbiome and infectious pathogens. His contribution to the Group will revolve around the pathways in which AMR affects animals and the subsequent economic consequences for farmers and potential effects on the livestock sector.