Building antimicrobial stewardship capacity through participatory health literacy workshops in Zimbabwe
Martin Mickelsson, Tungamirirai Simbini

TL;DR
Workshops in Zimbabwe improved health workers' understanding of antimicrobial resistance, helping them use antibiotics more responsibly.
Contribution
A novel participatory workshop approach to build antimicrobial stewardship capacity in resource-limited Southern African healthcare settings.
Findings
Workshops enhanced AMR-related health literacy among health practitioners.
Interactive literacy improved interdisciplinary collaboration.
Critical literacy helped identify AMR drivers in resource-limited contexts.
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a mounting sustainability challenge to healthcare systems, especially in Southern African settings, where antimicrobial stewardship capacity is limited by resource constraints, with structural challenges exacerbating the problem of resistance. Strengthening education could support the development of AMR-related knowledge, and stewardship skills for health practitioners are key to enhancing antimicrobial use and addressing AMR. This paper investigates how participatory research workshops can support the development of AMR-related health literacy among Zimbabwean health practitioners (doctors, nurses and pharmacists) and how such literacy can promote antimicrobial stewardship. Eight interdisciplinary workshops involving 25 health practitioners were conducted at two teaching hospitals in Harare, Zimbabwe. Workshop transcripts were analysed using a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntibiotic Use and Resistance · Global Maternal and Child Health · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility
