Vaccines have a crucial role in tackling antimicrobial resistance

Standfirst

Tackling the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance requires all the tools we have at our disposal — including vaccines.

Listing image
In a stylised illustration, several rows of illustrated vaccines close in on a group of cartoon microbes.
Credit
Jack Cole / Wellcome
Image rights
All Rights Reserved
File size
95972 bytes
Image width
1920px
Image height
1080px
Filename
immunisation-article-header.png
Image
In a stylised illustration, several rows of illustrated vaccines close in on a group of cartoon microbes.
Download allowed
On
Content
Admin title
Intro
Group
Body

Antimicrobial resistance is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide. In 2019, it caused over a million deaths globally and was linked to almost five million.

Discovering new antimicrobials to replace those that no longer work is essential, but it isn’t the only way to tackle antimicrobial resistance.

Group title
How vaccines can tackle antimicrobial resistance
Admin title
How vaccines can tackle antimicrobial resistance
Group
Body

Vaccines can help prevent the spread of infections in the first place. Fewer infections mean less antimicrobials are used – therefore reducing the risk of antimicrobial resistance and drug-resistant infections.

There’s already promising evidence that vaccines can have both direct and indirect effects on drug-resistant infections. For example, research shows that H. influenzae b. and S. pneumoniae vaccines dramatically reduce the burden of these diseases and the incidences of resistant strains.

Vaccines also have a unique advantage because resistance to vaccines is incredibly rare. The same routine vaccines we give to young children for diphtheria and whooping cough are still being used 70 years on. As a result, we can roll out vaccines to as many people as possible without the risk of resistance developing. In fact, vaccines work better the more people get them. 

Group title
Using vaccines to tackle antimicrobial resistance is not a new idea
Admin title
Using vaccines to tackle antimicrobial resistance is not a new idea
Group
Select card type
Mid-page image card with meta data
Content
Body

And in Gavi’s latest Vaccine Investment Strategy, impact on antimicrobial resistance is used as an evaluation criteria for selecting new vaccines into their portfolio.

However, while recent years have seen a significant increase in initiatives to tackle antimicrobial resistance and increase our understanding of the role vaccines can play – it hasn’t been enough.

Antimicrobial resistance is one of the greatest health challenges of the 21st Century.

Despite research showing that vaccines could play a significant role in combatting many of the pathogens whose resistance to antimicrobials poses the greatest threat to human health, vaccines are rarely part of the antimicrobial resistance discussion.

It is vital that we continue to strengthen and utilise the evidence base on the impact of vaccines on the development of antimicrobial resistance, especially in low- and middle-income settings.

We cannot neglect the crucial role of vaccines in combatting this threat. 

Image display option
On
Listing summary

Tackling the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance requires all the tools we have at our disposal — including vaccines. 

Banner styling
Compact
Banner image
In a stylised illustration, several rows of illustrated vaccines close in on a group of cartoon microbes.
Credit
Jack Cole / Wellcome
Image rights
All Rights Reserved
File size
95972 bytes
Image width
1920px
Image height
1080px
Filename
immunisation-article-header.png
Image
In a stylised illustration, several rows of illustrated vaccines close in on a group of cartoon microbes.
Download allowed
On
Exclude from listings
Off
Meta title
Vaccines have a crucial role in tackling antimicrobial resistance | News | Wellcome
Meta description
Tackling the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance requires all the tools we have at our disposal — including vaccines.
Ordering date
Article type
Analysis
Published date
Article content type
News
Add noindex
Off
Statement
Off
Include schema
Article
3 minutes
Grey Background
Off
Include audio player
On
Audio filename
https://wellcome-dot-org-audio.s3.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/878a3051-9a30-4ca9-8425-d4b20b86aa52.ce034572-0bc5-4df4-bfc0-ddd6dcc47f85.mp3