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Action to support the implementation of Codex AMR texts (ACT) project - ACT in Pakistan: Empowering caretakers of livestock to help the country combat foodborne AMR

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    Action to support the implementation of Codex AMR texts (ACT) project - ACT project: Collaboration with a reference centre in Asia boosts AMR surveillance capacity building
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    2024
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    The FAO-implemented and Republic of Korea-funded Action to support implementation of Codex AMR Texts (ACT) project is supporting six countries to improve awareness, good practices, governance and surveillance of foodborne antimicrobial resistance (AMR). This story describes the training and support offered by the ACT project to its four implementing countries in Asia: Cambodia, Mongolia, Nepal and Pakistan, to participate in proficiency testing at a FAO Reference Centre for AMR at the Chulalongkorn University Faculty of Veterinary Medicine (CU VET) in Bangkok, Thailand.
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    Action to support the implementation of Codex AMR texts (ACT) project - Veterinary drug residues and AMR: Hidden connections and a tool to find them
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    2025
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    Built around a concise, modular questionnaire, the FAO Residues of Veterinary Drugs in Foods (RVDF) Tool assesses countries’ capacity to analyse and monitor residues of veterinary drugs, including antimicrobials, in foods. The Tool encourages respondents to consider strengthening their capacity to collect residue data relevant to antimicrobial resistence (AMR) management in addition to the core assessment on the basic compliance monitoring capacities for residues. Often, the situation is more positive than countries think. Inspired by the structure of FAO’s Assessment Tool for Laboratories and AMR Surveillance Systems (FAO-ATLASS) tool for AMR surveillance, the RVDF Tool includes separate modules that can beused independently to evaluate national, university or private laboratories. This modular design allows countries to identify specific capacity gaps — even in the absence of a centralized monitoring infrastructure. The Tool is also been useful to donor countries.The success of the RVDF Tool lies in its alignment with the One Health approach. Addressing veterinary drug residues and AMR effectively requires coordinated action across food safety, animal health, environmental protection, and public health. The RVDF Tool encourages this multisectoral collaboration by supporting stakeholder mapping and engagement, helping countries develop integrated, sustainable solutions.
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    Action to support the implementation of Codex AMR texts (ACT) project - ACT in the Plurinational State of Bolivia: Building Governance to Contain Foodborne Antimicrobial Resistance
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    2024
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    This is the second instalment in a 6-part series that highlights the successes of the FAO-implemented and Republic of Korea-funded Action to support implementation of Codex AMR Texts (ACT) project. This success story focuses on the establishment by the Government of the Plurinational State of Bolivia of a multisectoral committee that will assess the country's needs in combatting the threat of foodborne AMR.

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