Antimicrobial Resistance: Why it matters to your employees’ health

Discover why antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is called the silent pandemic and how it impacts employees’ health, productivity, and workplace.

Quick Summary

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the biggest global health challenges today, and it directly impacts employees’ health and productivity. AMR is making infections harder to treat, leading to longer sick leaves, higher costs, and stressed employees. India faces the biggest challenge, but prevention is possible. With smarter antibiotic use and employee wellness programs, both employees and employers can fight this silent pandemic.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is antimicrobial resistance (AMR)?

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It’s when bacteria, viruses, fungi, or parasites stop responding to medicines, making infections harder to treat.

What are the four types of AMR?

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Bacterial resistance, Viral resistance, Fungal resistance and Parasitic resistance

Who is responsible for AMR?

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Overuse/misuse of antibiotics, poor infection control, overuse in farming, and weak regulations.

Why does AMR matter?

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It makes treatments less effective, increases illness and death, and threatens medical progress.

Why does India have such high antimicrobial resistance?

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India faces high AMR due to overuse of antibiotics (often without prescription), poor infection control in hospitals, widespread use of antibiotics in livestock, lack of awareness, and limited enforcement of drug regulations.

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