| Literature DB >> 34943732 |
Massimiliano Marvasi1, Lilliam Casillas2, Alberto Vassallo1, Diane Purchase3.
Abstract
Antibiotic resistance is one of the biggest threats to global health, food security and development. Urgent action is needed at all levels of society to reduce the impact and spread of antibiotic resistance. For a more sustaining approach, education in children, college students, citizens and caregivers are essential. The One-Heath approach is a collaborative, multisectoral and transdisciplinary strategy in which, no single organizations or sector can address the issue of antimicrobial resistance at the human-environment interface alone. Within this strategy, education plays a central role. In this scoping review, we highlighted a range of learning activities on antibiotic resistance as part of the One-Health approach. In particular, those applications that can be introduced to a wide audience to help arrest the current crisis for the next generation. The review identifies a high number of teaching opportunities: board and role-play games, round tables, musicals, e-learning and environmental experiments to couple with more curricula and formal education to inform a diverse group of audiences.Entities:
Keywords: One-Health; antibiotics; antimicrobial resistances; formal education; informal education
Year: 2021 PMID: 34943732 PMCID: PMC8698298 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10121519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Educational activities for different learning groups on antimicrobial resistance. The picture shows the interconnection of six domains in which the antimicrobial One-Health approach should be integrated. CURE: Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience. The graphic is adapted from the free resource, PresentationGO.com accessed on 8 September 2021.
Merits and the demerits of the type of learning proposed.
| Type of Activity | Merits | Demerits |
|---|---|---|
| Informal education: Theater presentations | These activities are driven by learners’ interest and have been developed for a wide range of audiences and children. | As the target audiences are the general public and children, the activities tend to be at a superficial level of understanding. |
| Formal education: Presential or virtual workshops | These activities reach deeper explanation and concepts. | Level of participation is dependent on students’ interest and motivation. It may require studying some concepts in advance. |
| Combining informal and formal education | Useful to stimulate less interested students. | Students with prior knowledge may become disinterested and less engaged. |
| Course-based research experiences | The best in terms of understanding, motivation and interest. | Highly resources-intensive in terms of instructors’ involvement and consumables. It needs to be carefully organized. |
| Online activities | Activities always available. After preparation, they require relatively low maintenance from the instructor. | It attracts only motivated students and interested audiences. |