AMR and AR: Antimicrobial Resistance and Augmented Reality

Australia testimonials 2024: "Antibiotic stories: The sociology of antibiotics and antimicrobial resistance"

"Antibiotic stories: The sociology of antibiotics and antimicrobial resistance" is a 2024 report from Monash University's Centre to Impact AMR.

"This report provides a summary of qualitative research exploring the social and economic drivers of AMR. It is designed to encourage reflection on the underlying forces that shape antibiotic use. The following 5 topics were explored:

  1. Managing the impact of business models on prescribing
  2. Understanding antibiotic user identities and implications for the prescribing moment
  3. Addressing the social and psychological effects of antibiotics
  4. Advancing the therapeutic relationship: Trust, expertise and lived experience
  5. Navigating risk and time in prescribing decisions"
"Why stories? We have adopted the view that people create and share narratives to make sense of their life experiences and to establish social interaction with others. Prescribing an antibiotic depends on the sharing of illness narratives: the patient or pet owner has a story to tell of symptoms and worries for the prescriber to interpret; the rationale for the prescription (or not as the case may be) is narrated by the prescriber to help the patient or pet owner understand what they need to do next.

"We observed these narrations in our interviews and workshops and present selected extracts to develop the 5 antibiotic use topics. These experiential narratives provide insight into the lived experience of GPs, veterinarians, patients, and pet owners..."



The Centre to Impact AMR has created an "Alliance Against AMR with teams in Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Bangladesh, Singapore, Vietnam, Thailand, China and New Zealand."

The Infection, Immunity & Society Research Group at Monash U's School of Social Sciences has many other research outputs including:

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