Centre for Sustainable Aquaculture Futures, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.
Biosciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.
Glob Health Action. 2019;12(sup1):1734735. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2020.1734735.
One of the key strategic objectives of the World Health Organisation's global antimicrobial resistance (AMR) action plan is to improve public awareness and understanding of this issue. Very few AMR awareness campaigns have targeted the animal production sector, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) where rural communities can be geographically difficult to access via traditional face-to-face community engagement methods. Aquaculture is a major food production industry in Bangladesh and across Asia, an area which poses a significant risk to global AMR dissemination. In this pilot study, we sought to investigate the potential for digital communication materials to rapidly and effectively communicate AMR messages to rural aquaculture farmers in Bangladesh. Working with stakeholders from the Bangladesh aquaculture industry, we developed a 4-minute digital animation designed specifically for this audience and assessed its capacity to engage and communicate AMR messages to farmers. We then conducted a small-scale social media campaign, to determine the potential for rapidly disseminating AMR awareness materials to a large audience across Bangladesh, where there is an extensive 4 G internet network and an ever-increasing proportion of the population (57% as of December 2019) have mobile internet access. Thirty-six farmers were surveyed: all of them liked this method of communication and 97% said it would change the way they use antibiotics in the future. Through the social media campaign, the animation received 9,100 views in the first 2 weeks alone. Although preliminary, these results demonstrate the huge potential for digital communication methods for the rapid and widespread communication of AMR awareness materials to rural aquaculture communities in Bangladesh and across Asia. Our results support the need for more research into the most appropriate and effective content of AMR awareness campaigns for aquaculture communities and question the need for explaining the science underlying AMR in such communication materials.
世界卫生组织全球抗菌药物耐药性行动计划的主要战略目标之一是提高公众对抗菌药物耐药性问题的认识和理解。很少有抗菌药物耐药性宣传活动针对动物生产部门,特别是在农村社区地理位置难以通过传统的面对面社区参与方法到达的低收入和中等收入国家。水产养殖是孟加拉国和亚洲的主要食品生产行业,该地区对抗菌药物耐药性在全球的传播构成重大风险。在这项试点研究中,我们试图探讨数字通信材料是否有可能快速有效地向孟加拉国农村水产养殖农民传达抗菌药物耐药性信息。我们与孟加拉国水产养殖行业的利益相关者合作,开发了专门针对这一受众的 4 分钟数字动画,并评估了其向农民传达抗菌药物耐药性信息的能力和效果。然后,我们开展了一次小规模的社交媒体活动,以确定在孟加拉国迅速向广大受众传播抗菌药物耐药性意识材料的潜力,孟加拉国拥有广泛的 4G 互联网网络,而且越来越多的人口(截至 2019 年 12 月为 57%)可以使用移动互联网。我们对 36 名农民进行了调查:他们都喜欢这种沟通方式,97%的人表示这将改变他们未来使用抗生素的方式。通过社交媒体活动,该动画在头两周内就获得了 9100 次观看。尽管这只是初步结果,但这些结果表明,数字通信方法在孟加拉国和亚洲农村水产养殖社区快速广泛传播抗菌药物耐药性意识材料具有巨大潜力。我们的研究结果支持需要对水产养殖社区抗菌药物耐药性宣传活动的最合适和最有效的内容进行更多研究,并质疑在这种沟通材料中解释抗菌药物耐药性背后的科学的必要性。