Keenan Katherine, Silva Corrêa Juliana, Sringernyuang Luechai, Nayiga Susan, Chandler Clare I R
School of Geography and Sustainable Development, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, UK.
Getulio Vargas Foundation, São Paulo School of Business Administration (EAESP FGV), São Paulo, Brazil.
JAC Antimicrob Resist. 2025 Mar 10;7(2):dlae208. doi: 10.1093/jacamr/dlae208. eCollection 2025 Apr.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a growing global health threat, which is increasingly quantified in terms of its human health and economic burden. In this article, we highlight that for policy and planning purposes the social burden of AMR is as important to attend to as health and economic burdens, requiring systematic consideration and measurement of multiple dimensions. We provide a conceptual and empirical overview of four dimensions of the social burden of AMR: the distribution of AMR among and between populations; the lived experiences of AMR by patients and carers; how and by whom AMR interventions are shouldered; and how AMR can change society. We illustrate these dimensions through five case studies drawn from research projects in the UK, East Africa, Thailand and Brazil. Drawing on these insights, we discuss challenges and opportunities for documentation and measurement of AMR's social burden going forward. Taking this seriously aligns with the consensus observation that to address AMR requires moving away from pathogen-based and siloed disciplinary perspectives and means embracing different forms of data and evidence from around the world. We propose an interdisciplinary engagement across researchers, policy makers and community stakeholders to arrive at agreed principles and metrics for future monitoring of the social burden. We need to tackle invisibility through lack of data by considering the social burden in design of AMR surveillance and research, includes mainstreaming social science data, and incorporating arts-based approaches to understanding AMR. Recognition, documentation and measurement of the social burdens of AMR will advance AMR approaches and help develop equitable solutions.
抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)是一个日益严重的全球健康威胁,其对人类健康和经济负担的影响正越来越多地被量化。在本文中,我们强调,出于政策和规划目的,AMR的社会负担与健康和经济负担同样重要,需要对多个维度进行系统的考量和衡量。我们提供了AMR社会负担四个维度的概念性和实证性概述:AMR在人群内部和人群之间的分布;患者及护理人员对抗菌药物耐药性的实际体验;AMR干预措施的承担方式及承担者;以及AMR如何改变社会。我们通过五个案例研究来说明这些维度,这些案例研究来自英国、东非、泰国和巴西的研究项目。基于这些见解,我们讨论了未来记录和衡量AMR社会负担所面临的挑战和机遇。认真对待这一点与以下共识性观点一致,即应对AMR需要摆脱基于病原体和孤立学科的视角,意味着要采用来自世界各地的不同形式的数据和证据。我们建议研究人员、政策制定者和社区利益相关者进行跨学科合作,以达成未来监测社会负担的商定原则和指标。我们需要通过在AMR监测和研究设计中考虑社会负担来解决因数据缺乏导致的不可见性问题,包括将社会科学数据纳入主流,并采用基于艺术的方法来理解AMR。对抗菌药物耐药性社会负担的认识、记录和衡量将推动应对AMR的方法,并有助于制定公平的解决方案。