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Much Can Be Learned about Addressing Antibiotic Resistance from Multilateral Environmental Agreements

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Extract

Antibiotic resistance (ABR) is a common-pool resource challenge like those that global environmental scholars have been addressing for decades. Just like clean air, fish stocks, and oceans, antibiotic effectiveness shares the two defining qualities of a common good: it is rivalrous in that it is limited or subtractable upon use, and it is non-excludable in that it is very difficult to stop people from abusing them inappropriately. This is because each use of antibiotics increases the likelihood that affected bacteria will adapt and evolve in ways that makes them less susceptible to these bacteria- harming antibiotics. The natural development of resistance is what separates antibiotics from most other medicines — the use of which do not affect the effectiveness of these medicines for others.

Type
JLME Supplement
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2015

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