Plymouth Academic Crucial in Global Antimicrobial Resistance Drive

A researcher from the University of Plymouth has played a lead role in developing a major new campaign designed to raise awareness of antimicrobial resistance (AMR).
Dr Tina Joshi, Associate Professor of Molecular Microbiology, is one of the key drivers of the Knocking Out AMR project launched recently by the Microbiology Society.
The project aims to bring together people working to address AMR all over the world and develop international, cross-disciplinary collaborations that will ultimately lead to feasible and effective solutions.
Dr Joshi is recognised globally for her work to tackle AMR, and has been researching its potential impact on our planet and its inhabitants for well over a decade.
She has been working for the past two years to develop this project, through her role as Co-Chair of the Microbiology Society's Impact & Influence Committee, and has also now assumed the role of Co-Chair of the Knocking Out AMR project itself.
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