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  1.  12
    The Global Innovation Model for Antibiotics Needs Reinvention.Manica Balasegaram, Charles Clift & John-Arne Røttingen - 2015 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (s3):22-26.
    The dangers presented by antibiotic resistance have now established themselves as a global health security issue. From an international policy perspective, three key pillars have been established: responsible access, conservation, and innovation. These pillars are intrinsically linked, meaning that any attempt to address one must take into account the implications for the other two.An urgent need exists to address the innovation failure in ABR. In the field of anti-bacterials, the pipeline remains anemic in terms of therapeutics with novel mechanisms of (...)
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  2.  16
    Should Antibiotics Be Controlled Medicines? Lessons from the Controlled Drug Regimen.Live Storehagen, Friha Aftab, Christine Årdal, Miloje Savic & John-Arne RØttingen - 2018 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 46 (s1):81-94.
    This study aimed to identify the antibiotic-relevant lessons from the controlled drug regimen for narcotics. Whereas several elements of the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs could be advantageous for antibiotics, we doubt that an international legally binding agreement for controlling antibiotic consumption would be any more effective than implementing stewardship measures through national AMR plans.
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  3.  23
    Examining the Global Health Arena: Strengths and Weaknesses of a Convention Approach to Global Health Challenges.Just Balstad Haffeld, Harald Siem & John-Arne Røttingen - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (3):614-628.
    The article comprises a conceptual framework to analyze the strengths and weaknesses of a global health convention. The analyses are inspired by Lawrence Gostin's suggested Framework Convention on Global Health. The analytical model takes a starting-point in events tentatively following a logic sequence: Input (global health funding), Processes (coordination, cooperation, accountability, allocation of aid), Output (definition of basic survival needs), Outcome (access to health services), and Impact (health for all). It then examines to what degree binding international regulations can create (...)
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    Examining the Global Health Arena: Strengths and Weaknesses of a Convention Approach to Global Health Challenges.Just Balstad Haffeld, Harald Siem & John-Arne Røttingen - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (3):614-628.
    Global health is a concept which in recent years has evoked a lot of interest from both academics, politicians, celebrities, and the media. The term “global health” implies a globally shared responsibility to provide health as a public good through an expansive number of initiatives. This emerging era of consciousness about our international interdependence, regardless of a problem’s geographic location or type of disease, may be a good moment for exploring the strengths and weaknesses of an international law approach to (...)
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