Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

Antimicrobial Resistance and Migration: Interrelation Between Two Hot Topics in Global Health.

Cotugno S, De Vita E, Frallonardo L, Novara R, Papagni R, Asaduzzaman M, Segala FV, Veronese N, Nicastri E, Morea A, Farkas FB, Lakatos B, Iatta R, Putoto G, Saracino A, Di Gennaro F.

Ann Glob Health · 2025

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Summary

This paper explores the intersection of two prominent global health challenges — antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and human migration — reviewing evidence on how population movement may influence the acquisition, carriage, and dissemination of resistant pathogens across borders. Drawing on an international author group with expertise in infectious diseases and global health, the review likely synthesises epidemiological data on AMR prevalence in migrant cohorts alongside contextual factors such as healthcare access, antibiotic stewardship, and conditions during migration. The paper appears to contribute a structured overview of the bidirectional relationship between migration dynamics and AMR spread, with implications for surveillance and policy.

UK applicability

Whilst the study is global in scope, the findings are pertinent to the UK given its role as a destination country for migrants and asylum seekers, and in the context of the UK's National Action Plan on AMR; clinicians and public health authorities may find the evidence relevant for screening protocols and stewardship strategies.

Key measures

Prevalence of antimicrobial-resistant organisms in migrant populations; carriage rates of resistant pathogens; antibiotic consumption patterns; migration routes and AMR transmission risk

Outcomes reported

The paper likely examines the relationship between human migration patterns and the spread or acquisition of antimicrobial-resistant organisms, exploring epidemiological links, risk factors, and public health implications across migrant populations and host countries.

Theme
Nutrition & health
Subject
Infectious disease & antimicrobial resistance
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
Global
System type
Human clinical
DOI
10.5334/aogh.4628
Catalogue ID
NRmo3f02hq-064

Topic tags

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