By Shobha Shukla
The common phrase ‘good girls take care of family’ reflects a deeply ingrained social expectation, often referred to as ‘Good Girl Syndrome,’ where girls and women are expected to be nurturers, compliant, and prioritize others’ needs over their own. This often translates to handling household burdens, emotional labor, and caregiving to ensure family stability.
Girls and women and people of all gender diversities need to prioritize infection prevention and control and access public healthcare services in a rights-based, gender-transformative, non-stigmatizing, and non-discriminatory manner as and when needed.
AMR threatens health, food, and the environment
“Drug resistance, or antimicrobial resistance (AMR), is caused by misuse and overuse of medicines in human health, livestock health, food, and agriculture, and it is also polluting our environment. We cannot afford any misuse and overuse of medicines in any sector if we are to deliver on SDGs. However, AMR is already among the top 10 global health threats and is also threatening food security and our environment, along with a high economic cost,” said Dr. Ijyaa Singh of ReAct Asia Pacific at the Women Deliver Conference 2026—the world’s largest gathering on gender equality this year.
Women and girls (including those sick with infectious diseases) are the primary caregivers in most settings, especially in the Global South. But the infection prevention and control measures in the healthcare facilities, communities, and homes are far from optimal to protect them and undermine the roles and responsibilities they shoulder.
Many studies looking at the male: female ratio of child vaccination, unsurprisingly, reveal that the male child is more likely to have received essential immunisation as compared to a female child. When it comes to screening and diagnostics for a range of infections, women are less likely to seek health services in a rights-based, person-centered, and gender-transformative manner. A complex mix of biological, social, cultural, and economic factors arising from gender-based inequalities and injustices impacts infection prevention and control, added Dr. Ijyaa Singh.

Gender inequalities fuel AMR.
Gender inequalities, harmful gender norms, stereotypes, and tropes have normalized the neglect of the well-being of girls and women, making them more vulnerable to AMR.
The lived experience of girls and women and gender-diverse communities shows how violence puts them at increased risk of getting infected with sexually transmitted infections.
According to Dr. Soumya Swaminathan (former Deputy Director General for Programs and former Chief Scientist of the World Health Organization – WHO), we cannot be successful in reducing or preventing AMR without tackling gender-based violence, as violence impacts the access of women to healthcare.
She was speaking at AMR Dialogues hosted earlier this year by the Global AMR Media Alliance (GAMA), which was re-presented at the SHE & Rights session at the Women Deliver Conference 2026.
“Women are at a very high risk of intimate partner violence or domestic violence, physical or sexual. This could lead to more infections. And because of their position within the household and the community, they are less likely to seek timely and adequate care for these injuries or infections, which could lead to drug-resistant infections.
Whether it is sexually transmitted infections, urinary tract infections, reproductive tract infections, or pelvic inflammatory disease, all of these are linked with sexual violence and an increased risk of antibiotic use. Also, even if the woman seeks care, quite often follow-up is poor. She may have taken a partial course of antibiotics or the wrong doses. Women facing an unplanned pregnancy, or those who go for an unsafe abortion, are also at higher risk of AMR.”
Intersectional stigma and AMR
“Diseases or infections like TB or HIV carry a huge stigma in our society, especially for women. In many communities, a woman diagnosed with TB or HIV is judged not only as a patient but also as someone who has brought shame to the family. Her character, her marriage prospects, and even her abilities to be a good wife, daughter, and mother are questioned. I have seen many women hide their illness because of this stigma. “They delay testing, they avoid going to the clinics, some take the medicine secretly, and others stop treatment early to prevent family members or neighbors from finding out about it,” said Bhakti Chavan, a survivor of extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) – one of the most serious forms of drug-resistant TB.
Bhakti is also a member of WHO Task Force of AMR Survivors. She spoke in AMR Dialogues hosted by Global AMR Media Alliance (GAMA) which was re-presented at SHE & Rights session at Women Deliver Conference 2026.
AMR is not gender neutral. Impact of AMR is not gender blind. If we want to fight AMR effectively, we must listen to the women, diagnose them early on, ensure proper treatment, support adherence and design policies that include most vulnerable and marginalised women and consider their realities.
Dr Soumya Swaminathan cited an example of feminisation of agriculture. “From an intersectional perspective, here is a woman who lives in a rural area, she is also a small farmer, she has some livestock and she does some agriculture, and she has a family to look after. And she is alone because she has a migrant husband. And therefore, she has less access to health centers. She has less financial autonomy as well. In such a situation, she would be probably more likely to either neglect infections or take inappropriate treatment”.
There is a common consensus on the need to address gender inequalities in our National Action Plans on AMR.
“We must include gender-based violence indicators in AMR National Action Plans, recognising that sexual health and violence services are hotspots for antibiotic exposure and we must also include gender-sensitive stewardship indicators”, said Dr Swaminathan.
Why do we need a feminist AMR response?
The only possible effective and sustainable way to prevent AMR has to be a feminist way. AMR and other health responses must be rooted in the feminist development justice model, which is based on care and solidarity for each other, where no one is left behind in the truest sense of the words. We can only end health injustices when we also end gender, climate, social, and economic injustices.
