SRM University-A.P. recently hosted a three-day India-UK network meeting focused on antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The event brought together researchers, scientists, clinicians, veterinarians, and public health experts from both countries. Their goal was to strengthen collaboration on AMR, microbiome research, and joint projects. Experts covered many fields including microbiome metagenomics, AMR genomics, public health, pharma-nutraceuticals, phage engineering, social medicine, food microbiome, and animal health. The discussions highlighted new research happening nationally and internationally. The AMR network panel emphasized expanding community-level surveillance by integrating samples from humans, animals, and the environment. This includes livestock and wastewater monitoring. They stressed the need to identify interdisciplinary collaborators across India to create nationally representative AMR data. Panel members pointed out gaps in community AMR data due to low awareness and weak infrastructure. They also shared information on funding opportunities available in India and the UK to support AMR research under the One Health framework. Key participants included Suparna Mitra and Mahua Das from the University of Leeds; Ashawni Kumar Takur and Saravanan Matheswaran from IIT-Kanpur; Somasri Dam from the University of Burdwan; and many others from top Indian institutions like SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Bose Institute, Cancer Institute Chennai, JNU, CSIR, and more. Ch. Satish Kumar, Vice Chancellor of SRM University-A.P., said, "We need community engagement and awareness along with systematic data collection to effectively tackle AMR," pointing out its close link to public health.