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Showing 1–7 of 7 results
Advanced filters: Author: Claas Kirchhelle Clear advanced filters
  • Interactions between climate change and antimicrobial resistance across terrestrial, aquatic and health systems reveal shared drivers, synergies and trade-offs that shape health and environmental outcomes. This Comment outlines a solutions-oriented research agenda to advance evidence and action that addresses climate change and antimicrobial resistance as interconnected issues.

    • Kelly Moon
    • Bianca van Bavel
    • Rebecca King
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 15, P: 1264-1267
  • The escalating challenge of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has led to a surge of global research and policy discourse on refilling an empty antibiotic pipeline. The empty pipeline metaphor is, however, wrought with paradoxes. Drawing on critical social sciences and humanities research on pharmaceutical innovation, this comment article presents five of the key paradoxes that structure contemporary innovation discourse: Was the so-called “Golden Age” of antibiotics really golden? Was rational drug design truly rational in terms of antibiotic development? Was the antibiotic pipeline really built on a foundation of scientific breakthroughs by an elite group of (male) inventors? How can antibiotics, powerful symbols of industrial power, be considered as market failures? How could the crisis of antibiotics become the golden hour of their policing? Rather than dissect each paradox, the article aims to complicate standard problem diagnoses and encourage creative new conceptualizations of inclusive antimicrobial innovation.

    • Mirza Alas Portillo
    • Isabel M. Gómez Rodríguez
    • Frédéric Vagneron
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-4
  • Planetary boundaries range from climate change to biosphere integrity. They define the safe space for humanity. Ecosystem impacts on microbes are missing from a recent assessment showing six of nine boundaries are breached. Microbes represent enormous phylogenetic diversity and underpin multiple planetary systems. Here, we suggest that reconceiving AMR as a sign of ecosystem stress may enable us to steward our wider microbial commons, protecting planetary systems from being breached.

    • Claas Kirchhelle
    • Adam P. Roberts
    Comments & OpinionOpen Access
    npj Antimicrobials and Resistance
    Volume: 3, P: 1-2