The AMAST (AMR in Agrifood Systems Transdisciplinary) Network is dedicated to protecting the future of our food systems and public health by addressing antimicrobial resistance through collaborative, innovative research and action.
The Climate Change Impacts on AMR Using a Planetary Health Framework (CLIMAR) Network examines the relationship between AMR, climate change, pollution, biodiversity, and other drivers captured by the planetary boundaries concept.
Accurate, Rapid, Robust and Economical Solutions against Antimicrobial Resistance
IMPACT AMR addresses key policy questions around AMR mitigation and adaptation strategies.
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Futures AMR Network: Addressing the complexities of AMR requires a network that offers both short and long-term resource expertise and dynamic solutions through ongoing dialogue with tomorrow’s leaders, early career researchers (ECRs).
The PEOPLE AMR Network brings together transdisciplinary researchers working on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) to identify better ways to develop, evaluate, and implement multi-faceted interventions to promote prudent antimicrobial use in the community.