Smart regulation of antibiotic use in India: Understanding, innovating and improving compliance

Lead Research Organisation: University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Law

Abstract

The containment of AMR is a multi-faceted task that needs a one-health approach as suggested in the World Health Organization's (WHO) 2015 Global Action Plan (GAP) on AMR. Countries including India have aligned their National Action Plans (NAPs) on AMR with this international guidance. One of the important links for various activities for AMR containment is the appropriate use of antibiotics to reduce selection pressure on microbes. According to the GAP, effective regulation will be a key tool for ensuring that national standards aimed at optimising the use of antimicrobial medicines in human and animal health are followed in practice. The academic literature suggests, however, that the Indian government faces a number of challenges in the regulatory sphere. Regulations may be fragmented or incomplete in relation to AMR-relevant sectors, Furthermore, empirical studies demonstrate that effective state-level regulation can be impeded by a range of systemic problems, including human resource constraints, ambivalence in the roles of regulatory organisations, ineffective co-ordination between regulatory groups and the contestation of regulatory policies by private stakeholders.

Fundamental questions therefore arise about whether a credible and enforceable AMR regulatory framework can be developed for India, and if so, how best to tackle this complex challenge. The core idea of this project is to apply the ideas and methods of 'smart regulation' to better understand the underlying problems and co-produce innovative regulations with regulators and regulatory subjects that will likely lead to mutually acceptable regulations and improved compliance. Three central design principles of smart regulation include: a) the use of a range of 'softer' regulatory options to shape behaviour in conjunction with 'traditional' regulatory measures of fines and legal penalties; b) effective stakeholder engagement and input into regulation; and c) an emphasis on identifying win-win outcomes in regulation. We will implement the 'smart regulation' approach through, inter alia, interactive workshops that bring regulators and other stakeholders in AMR-related sectors together to share perspectives and discuss viable regulatory options. We will focus on four particularly important sectors for AMR containment (antibiotic sales over-the counter at pharmacies, hospital AMR containment use of antibiotics in poultry farming and antibiotics in pharmaceutical industry effluent).

Our project has been designed to have significant impact on the Indian regulatory environment. By engaging with regulators and subjects of regulation in the two selected Indian states and in central government right from the start, the project will encourage 'buy-in' and enable us to develop a rich understanding of the situated positions of the key actors in the field of AMR regulation in India. The regulatory options emerging from the collaborative spirit of the workshops will be acceptable to regulators and other stakeholders, and therefore likely to result in increased compliance. The project's key outputs will include a user-friendly guidance document to facilitate uptake of the 'smart regulation' approach for AMR containment in other Indian states and also internationally. We will also co-design a 'Statement of Intent' that we will encourage the regulators (and potentially other stakeholders) to adopt and sign.

Planned Impact

Regulation is a key tool to tackle the problem of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). In India for many of the sectors impacted by AMR, the law seems fragmented/disconnected or lacking- e.g., in poultry, aquaculture, livestock and environmental protection, clear regulations with respect to AMR are lacking. Compliance is often poor and enforcement is patchy, even when the existing regulations are fairly clear. For better compliance of regulation and improvement in use of antibiotics we need to move beyond traditional approaches (legal threats/penalties) and to use innovative softer approaches. For the work proposed we will engage sector-specific regulators and their regulatory targets right from the beginning of our work and understand their perspective and co-design implementable options for regulators.

Our research involves an innovative methodology of co-designing smart and soft regulations by an interactive process between various regulators and the stakeholders affected by these regulations. We have chosen four case studies which involve one-health approach for containment of antimicrobial resistance, namely human, animal and environment. The four case studies are: (i) OTC antibiotic sales at pharmacies without valid prescription; (ii) Poultry farmers using antibiotics (including as a growth factor); (iii) Hospital AMR containment and (iv) Pharma industry effluents and AMR.

The choice of regulatory approaches which the study may propose for the four case studies following the research has potential to impact the regulatory environment. With the innovative regulations designed with regulators and stakeholders with the facilitation of multi-disciplinary Indian and UK team, we hope to achieve better compliance of regulation which will decrease overuse of antibiotics in the community for both human and poultry and better regulation for effluent of antibiotics from pharmaceutical industry.

By including influential members in the advisory panel and with in-depth interviews with key holders and involving them in the interactive workshops and dissemination meeting, we are likely to have regulations implemented in the two study states. We will also involve the media in our dissemination meeting and are sure there will be coverage in print media about AMR and our innovative approach of co-designing smart regulations for containment of AMR. Our research and work will raise awareness in the community and amongst policy makers and regulators about AMR, the containment of AMR and the appropriate use of antibiotics, which is the need of the hour.

The two states will be strengthened in their policy environment and through stakeholder engagement. The Indian research team will be strengthened in research, writing and policy engagement skills. Their international counterparts will gain greater understanding of local realities and challenges.

We are sure that in the near future the other states of India will also work towards creating such a regulatory environment combined with awareness programmes which will decrease the burden of antibiotic in the environment and selection pressure on microbes for the containment of antimicrobial resistance. Thus, our study will have great impact on containment of AMR which will have impact on the health and development of the nation.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Pilot workshop - OTC sales of antibiotics case-study VP Chest Institute, New Delhi, 29 February 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact There were 20 participants including representatives from the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation, pharmacists' association, cinsomers and project team members. The project's co-design methodology was tested during the workshop, and is being modified based on the findings in the workshop report.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Stakeholder Network Mapping workshop for OTC sales of antibiotics case-study, VP Chest Institute, New Delhi, 17 January 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact There were 12 participants including representatives from the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation, Haryana State Drug Regulatory Authority, the pharmaceutical industry and a non-governmental organisation, as well as retail pharmacists. The workshop was based on a systems approach and net-mapping and led to a stakeholder mapping report.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Stakeholder consultations with groups of medical, veterinary, pharmaceutical and policy/regulatory stakeholders. These were conducted as part of our intervention co-design process to develop antibiotic stewardship for community settings in India. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Aim of the workshops:
To co-design, with diverse stakeholders, a One Health antibiotic stewardship intervention for community settings in India.

Objectives of the workshops:
Present evidence to stimulate reflection and dialogue amongst stakeholders regarding their roles within the healthcare system in the context of AMR.
Enable a deeper understanding of the alignments and misalignments between antibiotic stewardship practices and the realities of the health and antibiotic systems (private and public), supply chain incentives and business models, and community needs.
Engage stakeholders in the co-design of an intervention for antibiotic stewardship in primary care and community settings.
Develop and evaluate a strategy for multi-stakeholder engagement to influence policy.

We organised four workshops with groups of medical and veterinary practitioners, pharmaceutical industry leaders and senior managers, and policymakers. Workshop participants (approximately 50 in total) agreed with our study findings and participated in animated discussions. Several common recommendations that emerged across the four groups. These included:

-Development of tier-wise guidelines for antibiotic use in human and livestock health, starting at the level of the para healthcare providers (as these do not exist at present).
-Continuing training and orientation about antibiotics for all supply chain actors and communities
-Antimicrobial resistance surveillance at different tiers of the health system to understand patterns of resistance
-Prescription audits for health professionals
- Development of an evidence based code of conduct/marketing for the pharmaceutical stakeholders to align the promotion and marketing of antibiotics with guidelines.
- Strengthening mentorship and referral links between formal and informal providers in human and veterinary sectors, to create stepped care models for less accessible rural areas.
As a next step, we have established two task groups to work on antibiotic use guidelines for para health providers for human and for animal health, and a third one will develop a pharmaceutical code of conduct with industry stakeholders.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
URL https://oasisamr.com/key-stakeholder-consultations/
 
Description UKRI AMR Event Series - AMR and One Health after COVID-19 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact The aim of this series of workshops was to consolidate learning from across UKRI-funded Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) projects to synthesise and highlight high-level findings of global relevance from these research investments. Workshops also considered research findings and future priorities in relation to COVID-19 and the global implications for AMR and antimicrobial stewardship. To achieve this, the event series aimed to: (i) enable grant holders to consider and compare key findings from UKRI investments in global AMR research and engage high-level stakeholders, in order to maximise impact for policy and practice; (ii) showcase research excellence across the UKRI portfolio of AMR research; and (iii) initiate dialogue between AMR researchers, funders, and other stakeholders regarding the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic for AMR and implications for future One Health AMR strategies.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Workshop - 'Involving participants in developing Smart Regulation' V.P. Chest Institute Delhi, 21-23 August 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact This workshop tested the project's proposed co-design approach, through workshops and activities that took place at the V.P. Chest Institute in Delhi between 21st - 23rd August 2019. The workshops focused on the project case sector study of OTC sales of antibiotics with the main goal to review the co-design methodology before adapting and deploying it to the other three sectors.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019