Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Global Action Plan on AMR
LegislationCH

Global Action Plan on AMR

A WHO-led ten-year plan adopted at WHA79 in May 2026 targeting a 10% cut in bacterial AMR deaths by 2030.

Last refreshed: 14 July 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Does the new ten-year AMR plan have any enforcement teeth the 2015 one lacked?

Timeline for Global Action Plan on AMR

#81 Jun

One in six infections beats the drug

Pandemics and Biosecurity
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What is the new WHO antimicrobial resistance action plan for 2026 to 2036?
The Global Action Plan on AMR 2026-2036 was adopted at the 79th World Health Assembly in May 2026. The WHO-led framework targets a 10% reduction in bacterial AMR deaths by 2035, updating the original 2015 plan with new accountability milestones and a financing framework aimed at countries where laboratory capacity is weakest.Source: WHO / WHA79
How bad is antibiotic resistance getting in 2026?
The WHO GLASS 2025 report, published in June 2026 and drawing on 23 million lab-confirmed infections across 104 countries, found that one in six infections globally no longer responds to first-line antibiotics and that resistance rose in 40% of pathogen-drug combinations tracked between 2018 and 2023. In South-East Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean, one in three infections is resistant.Source: WHO GLASS 2025 report
What is the difference between the 2015 and 2026 WHO AMR action plans?
The original 2015 plan (adopted at WHA68) established five objectives, awareness, surveillance, infection prevention, antibiotic stewardship, and new drug development. The 2026-2036 revision maintains those pillars but adds explicit accountability milestones and a financing framework; critics note it still lacks mandatory reporting or enforceable stewardship standards.Source: WHO

Background

The Global Action Plan on AMR (GAP-AMR) is the WHO-coordinated framework for addressing antimicrobial resistance. The second iteration, covering 2026 to 2036, was adopted at the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA79) in May 2026 and sets a headline target of cutting bacterial AMR deaths by 10% by 2035. It arrives at a moment of sharp statistical urgency: WHO's Global Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System (GLASS) published its 2025 report in June 2026 showing that one in six bacterial infections globally no longer responds to first-line antibiotics, and that resistance rose across 40% of the pathogen-drug combinations tracked between 2018 and 2023. In South-East Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean, resistance reaches one in three infections.

The original Global Action Plan on AMR was adopted at WHA68 in 2015 and established five objectives: improving awareness, strengthening surveillance, reducing infection, optimising antibiotic use, and developing new medicines. The 2026-2036 revision maintains those pillars while adding explicit accountability milestones and a financing framework designed to address the fact that surveillance capacity is scarcest precisely where resistance is highest. The GLASS report notes that low- and middle-income countries are systematically under-represented in resistance data, meaning published global figures are likely understating the true burden.

AMR is projected to cause 10 million deaths per year by 2050 on current trajectories. The GAP-AMR's 10% reduction target is therefore modest relative to the scale of the problem, and critics have noted that without mandatory reporting and enforceable antibiotic stewardship standards, the plan risks repeating the pattern of the 2015 framework: strong rhetoric, patchy implementation.

On 1 July 2026 WHO published its first fungal disease and antifungal-resistance Blueprint, explicitly naming the fungal resistance gap that the bacterial-only GAP-AMR does not cover. The Blueprint does not replace GAP-AMR; it sits beside it as a companion strategy, meaning WHO's AMR architecture is now split between the bacterial plan adopted at WHA79 and a newly launched fungal strategy with its own, separate funding ask.

More questions
How many people could die from antibiotic resistance by 2050?
On current trajectories, AMR is projected to cause 10 million deaths per year by 2050, making it a leading cause of death globally. The 2026-2036 GAP-AMR targets a 10% reduction in bacterial AMR deaths by 2035.
Why doesn't the Global Action Plan on AMR cover fungal infections?
GAP-AMR 2026-2036 was written to target bacterial resistance only. WHO published a separate first fungal disease and antifungal-resistance Blueprint on 1 July 2026, as a companion strategy addressing the gap the bacterial plan leaves uncovered.Source: WHO
Source Material