Loughborough University secures £545,000 in funding to tackle antimicrobial resistance

Published: 4-Nov-2015

Multidisciplinary team aims to identify research projects to help fight this global health threat


Researchers at Loughborough University have secured £545,000 in funding from the UK's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) to help fight resistance to antibiotics.

The majority of the world’s pathogenic bacteria have now developed some level of resistance to antibiotics used to treat them, and medical professionals are therefore using last-resort drugs.

Integrated intervention approaches, including developing new treatments, targeted drug delivery, rapid diagnostics, and environmental decontamination strategies, combined with better understanding of the human and social dimensions of the problem are desperately needed.

Loughborough’s project, Tackling antimicrobial resistance: An interdisciplinary approach, will bring together experts from chemical engineering, sport and health sciences, chemistry, maths, and mechanical and manufacturing engineering.

They will use the funding to improve the understanding of antimicrobial resistance at the University and beyond, and to identify opportunities and facilitate interdisciplinary research projects to help tackle this global health threat.

The Loughborough network will try to understand and explore mitigation strategies that relate to how the environment and human behaviour in community and healthcare settings enables the spread of resistance genes, and the acquisition and transmission of antimicrobial resistant infectious agents.

Scientists will interact with clinical and industry partners through a series of workshops, lectures and networking events to share knowledge and bring together experts to address the AMR challenge.

Project lead Dr Danish Malik, a senior lecturer in Chemical Engineering, said: 'We have many academics here at Loughborough whose expertise and technologies could be used to address AMR. This funding will allow us to bring those experts together, and link with specialists outside the University, to raise awareness of the challenge of AMR and explore collaborative research opportunities to help tackle the issue.

'Potentially we may soon be at a point globally where we run out of antibiotics. By working together we hope to make new discoveries to prevent this happening.'

A project launch event is being held at the Loughborough University Conference Centre, Burleigh Court on Monday 7 December from 9am. Guest speakers include Professor Robert Root-Bernstein (Michigan State University and author of Discovering: Inventing and Solving Problems at the Frontiers of Scientific Knowledge) and Dr Nina Chanishvili (Eliava Institute and a leading figure in Bacteriophage therapeutics research). Attendees need to register online.

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