AMR Data Surveillance for Targeted OneHealth Action

Chairs

Lars Münter
Carina Dantas

Mission and objective


Help build next generation data frameworks for AMR progress. This workshop will explore how OneHealth data models can transform AMR efforts. The session highlights the integration of data plaeorms and digital tools that empower communities in science, development, solutions, and implementation and the importance of citizen science in climate and biosphere solutions.

Strategies to fight AMR will be ineffective if data surveillance is slow or fragmented. Clinical systems face a losing battle against AMR in hospitals and care homes, antibiotic research is slow and costly, and diagnostic systems are still struggling to deliver accurate results for GPs.

While generalized approach to AMR literacy can be difficult to initiate and tricky to monitor for progress, targeted, practical interventions yield high impact in specific settings. And new projects under the OneHealth framework show promise, gathering higher-quality data from diverse sources, including environmental, urban, and social determinants.

Intended Audience


  • We invite all kinds of professionals interested in fighting the silent pandemic of AMR and in advancing local, national, or global policies for One Health
  • Public health professionals – perhaps working with health literacy programmes or citizen engagement
  • Infection prevention professionals – perhaps working with community action
  • Data scientists eager to build real time decision support tools
  • Health system specialists – perhaps working across health determinants
  • Health communication specialists interested in transformatory storytelling
  • Health economy analysts interested in high ROI initiatives

Expected outcomes


  • Five innovative data sets to reshape possibilities for AMR analysis.
  • Five innovative decision support tools to reshape possibilities for AMR action.
  • A stronger link between professionals in the digital health community, One Health activists, and the AMR issue.

Format and schedule


 Data Landscapes and Applications for AMR
18 min 3 x 3 min intro from Patty Kostkova, Carina Dantas, and Paloma Moraga Alapont (IHI REaDI project), followed by debate session facilitated by Lars Münter 
6 min Presentation of EHFF AMR Action Group findings by Lars Münter to inspire data design 
6 minPresentation of OneAquaHealth model by Carina Dantas to inspire application design 
40 min Participants are placed in groups of 8 to reimagine five data design feature needs for urban, rural, community, institutional, and clinical settings.  
12 min All groups report 
4 min Feedback from brave participant; Name one key personal takeaway from session 
4 min Summary by Lars Münter and Carina Dantas

SPEAKERS


Lars Münter (Chair)

Nordic Wellbeing Academy


Carina Dantas (Chair)

SHINE 2Europe



Paloma Moraga Alapont

La Paz University Hospital