"The book effectively assesses antimicrobial resistance from the One Health perspective using studies from both the human and veterinary medical fields. ... The book uniquely describes the reasons antimicrobials are used from the perspective of both human and veterinary medicine. ... This well-written book could serve as a resource for understanding the social factors affecting antimicrobial use and consumption in humans and animals." (Pamela A. Foral, Doody's Book Reviews, January 04, 2019)
Chapter 1 Risking Antimicrobial Resistance – A one-health study of antibiotic use and its societal aspects
Chapter 2 Dealing with explicit patient demands for antibiotics in a clinical setting
Chapter 3 Antibiotics in France and Italy: A linguistic analysis of policies and practices compared to Danish standards
Chapter 4 Talk on cough: symptom, sign and significance in acute primary care
Chapter 5 To prescribe or not to prescribe’ is not the only question: Physician attitudes towards antibiotics and prescription practices in Spain
Chapter 6 Governing the consumption of antimicrobials: The Danish model for using antimicrobials in a comparative perspective
Chapter 7 My Life as a Pig: MRSA and the Control of Life in Contemporary Pig Production
Chapter 8 Social stigmatization of pig farmers: Medical perspectives on modern pig farming
Chapter 9 What is ‘good doctoring’ when antibiotic resistance is a global threat?
Chapter 10 Governing risk by conveying just enough (un-)certainty: Rearticulating good doctoring as a psy-medical competence
Chapter 11 The antibiotic challenge: justifications for antibiotic usage in the world of medicine
Chapter 12 Concluding remarks on ‘Risking Antimicrobial Resistance’.
Carsten Strøby Jensen is Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Søren Beck Nielsen is Associate Professor at the Department of Nordic Studies and Linguistics, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Lars Fynbo is a researcher at VIVE—The Danish Centre for Social Science Research, Denmark.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is predicted to be one of the greatest threats to public health in the twenty-first century. In this context, understanding the reasons why perceptions of antibiotic risk differ between different groups is crucial when it comes to tackling antibiotic misuse. This innovative volume gathers together chapters written by sociologists, psychologists and linguists with the common aim of examining the social factors that affect use of antibiotics among humans and animals. A unique focus on Denmark – one of the world’s most progressive countries when it comes to antibiotic regulation – as well as Europe more broadly, makes this book a valuable resource for regulatory deliberations on future antibiotic policy to effectively combat AMR.