| Literature DB >> 34943644 |
Chris Degeling1, Victoria Brookes2, Tarant Hill3, Julie Hall1, Anastacia Rowles4, Cassandra Tull4, Judy Mullan5, Mitchell Byrne6, Nina Reynolds7, Olivia Hawkins1.
Abstract
Educating the public about antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is considered a key part of an optimal public health response. In both media depictions and policy discourses around health risks, how a problem is framed underpins public awareness and understanding, while also guiding opinions on what actions can and should be taken. Using a mixed methods approach we analyse newspaper content in Australia and the United Kingdom (UK) from 2011 to 2020 to track how causes, consequences and solutions to AMR are represented in countries with different policy approaches. Analyses demonstrate greater variability in the frames used in UK newspapers reflecting large hospital and community outbreaks and a sustained period of policy reform mid-decade. Newspapers in Australia focus more on AMR causes and consequences, highlighting the importance of scientific discovery, whereas UK coverage has greater discussion of the social and economic drivers of AMR and their associated solutions. Variations in the trends of different frames around AMR in UK newspapers indicate greater levels of public deliberation and debate around immediate and actionable solutions; whereas AMR has not had the same health and political impacts in Australia resulting in a media framing that potentially encourages greater public complacency about the issue.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; content analysis; newspapers; public awareness; public policy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34943644 PMCID: PMC8698020 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10121432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Frequency of articles on AMR in Australia and UK between 2011 and 2020. Figure key: (A) Annual Report of the Chief Medical Officer, Vol 2, 2011 [8]; (B) UK Five Year AMR Strategy 2013–18 [23]; (C) UK AMR Funder’s Forum established; (D) The O’Neil Review on Antimicrobial Resistance 2014 [11]; (E)—The UK’s Five-year National Action Plan. 2019 [29]; (F) The WHO Global Action Plan [56]; (G) Australia’s First National Antimicrobial Resistance Strategy 2015–2019 [26]; (H) Australia’s National Antimicrobial Resistance Strategy—2020 and beyond [30].
Figure 2Proportion of different framings in Australian and UK newspapers of the role and importance of microbes in AMR.
Figure 3The nine most mentioned types of microbes in Australian and UK newspaper coverage about AMR.
Figure 4Proportion of different framings in Australian and UK newspapers of the reason why members of the public should care about AMR.
Figure 5Proportion of different framings in Australian and UK newspapers of who and what is most at risk from AMR.
Figure 6Proportion of different framings in Australian and UK newspapers of who and what is responsible for causing AMR.
Figure 7Proportion of different framings in Australian and UK newspapers of possible solutions to the problem of AMR.
Figure 8Proportion of different framings in Australian and UK newspapers of who is responsible for fixing the problem of AMR.