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Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the gravest public health threats confronting the world, one projected to cause 39 million deaths by 2050 and a direct threat to the UK that demands urgent action, not shortsighted funding cuts.

The Fleming Fund has an effective surveillance tool to track resistant infections, supporting experts working in hundreds of laboratories in countries in Africa and Asia at the greatest danger from AMR. It is the perfect example of the UK aid budget being used to protect us all from health crises that respect no borders, which makes the government’s sudden decision to scrap it a shocking act of vandalism.

It is five months since the government announced its £5 billion cut to the UK’s overseas development budget, a 40% reduction taking spending to its lowest level this century, but only now are the grim consequences becoming clear. Projects to combat AMR are particularly vulnerable because they are funded by the Department of Health and Social Care which must slash almost two thirds from its share of the aid budget over the next two years, from £331 million to just £123 million. 

AMR evolves constantly across borders. When we abandon surveillance programmes we create blind spots that allow drug-resistant infections to spread unchecked. 

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: The Times, 21 July 2025

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