| Literature DB >> 32024549 |
Abou Ali Vedadhir1,2, Carla Rodrigues1, Helen Lambert3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an escalating global health issue with complex and dynamic interdependencies, high uncertainty and decision stakes, multiple drivers and stakeholders with diverse values and interests, and various aspects and outcomes. Addressing and combating this critical global challenge requires the formation and establishment of an interdisciplinary research approach that goes beyond the biosciences principally concerned with antimicrobial resistance to include other relevant natural and social sciences. The objective of this study will be to review and map existing social science knowledge and literature relating to antimicrobial resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR); Scoping review; Social science research
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32024549 PMCID: PMC7003437 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-020-1279-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Study details, characteristics, and results extraction instrument
| Scoping review title: | Social science research contributions to antimicrobial resistance: a scoping review |
| Review objective/s: | To identify, categorise, summarize, synthesize and map out existing knowledge, literature and evidence on AMR from social sciences research |
| Review question/s: | • What evidence or studies are available that address social, cultural, organizational, political or economic dimensions of AMR? • What empirical, conceptual and/or theoretical elements constitute this body of literature? • What knowledge and research gaps can be identified? |
| Concepts (what*): | AMR, Social Sciences |
| Population (for whom*): | Humans (excluding studies conducted in animals and plants) |
| Core concept: | Social science research contributions to AMR |
| Language: | English |
| Date of publication: | January 1998–September 2019 |
| Data extraction: | Name (i.e., person extracting data) |
| Date | |
| Publication details | |
| Author(s): | |
| Title: | |
| Type of publication/source (e.g. commentary/peer-reviewed journal) | |
| Year and place of publication: | |
| Aim(s)/research question(s): | |
| Type of study and/or methodological approach (including data collection methods and analytical approach, if available) | |
| Academic discipline/disciplinary approach (e.g. sociology, anthropology, economics): | |
| Location (where*) (e.g. country/province; rural/urban; country income level): | |
| Context (if applicable) (e.g. patients’ home, primary/secondary/tertiary healthcare, pharmacies/ drug shops, farms, local/national/international policy): | |
| Sample size (if applicable): | |
| Year(s) of data collection: | |
| Other results extracted from study or document content | |
| Conceptual/theoretical framework or approach: | |
Domains addressed/focus of study (e.g., prescribing, consuming or dispensing practices, social interactions including user—prescriber and/or professional—institutional interactions, formal/informal aspects, stockholders, contextual factors, drivers, costs and impacts, socio-cultural meanings, images and stigma, intervention development or evaluation, etc.); | |
| Key findings that relate to the scoping review question(s) (*what result): | |
| Comments on gaps, inconsistencies, biases and unmet needs in AMR research: | |
Reported AMR-related academic activities (e.g., research and teaching programs, fellowships, funded projects; NGOs and networks; program and policy development, campaigns, advocacy, and knowledge exchange activities, regulation and delivery on AMR, etc.): | |
| Other emerging information or themes (*what else): | |
*Components of the SPICE framework: Setting (where); Perspective/Population (for whom); Intervention/Phenomena of Interest (what); Comparison (what else); Evaluation (what result or how well)