Abstract

The concept of health has evolved markedly from a bio‐medical, mechanistic model to include an interdisciplinary perspective where human, animal and ecosystem health are integrated. One Health, EcoHealth and Planetary Health are examples of approaches to health advocating collaboration and interdisciplinarity at multiple levels. In practice, successful integration has been challenging and in particular, understanding of the ecosystem component of health lags behind the human and animal components. Antimicrobial resistance is an important threat to human health, which develops, is maintained and transmitted at the human–animal–environment interface. While the human and livestock components of resistance are well understood, this is not the case for the ecosystem component. This gap in knowledge leads to a poor representation of the environmental dimension of antimicrobial resistance in key policy documents and in interdisciplinary work around this issue. We interviewed a group of leading researchers in public health and ecology to explore their perceptions on the integration of ecosystem and public health research in the context of antimicrobial resistance. Experts from both fields considered that research on antimicrobial resistance is only beginning to consider ecosystems. They highlighted various barriers that have contributed to limited integration, such as conceptual barriers, and a lack of knowledge translators as facilitators. Better interdisciplinary integration is needed to address the challenge of antimicrobial resistance. Improving the dialogues between the disciplines is a necessary first step in this process. Greater engagement of ecologists is needed to build a more complete understanding of the role of ecosystems in human health, and identify how human interactions with ecosystems can both contribute to, and restrict, the development of antimicrobial resistance.

Highlights

  • Methods and resultsThe challenge of antimicrobial resistanceIncreasing awareness of the interdependence of human health with that of the ecosystems in which we live (Reid et al 2005, Lerner and Berg 2017) has underpinned the growth of interdisciplinary, holistic and multi-actor models of health, such as One Health, EcoHealth and Planetary Health (Zinsstag et al 2011, Gibbs 2014, Whitmee et al 2015, Lerner and Berg 2017, Prescott et al 2018)

  • We interviewed 16 leading researchers to explore the challenge of interdisciplinary research on antimicrobial resistance (AMR)

  • Five main themes emerged from our interviews: 1) the approach used to study AMR; 2) the state of knowledge in the field; 3) the scale and terminology used when discussing AMR; 4) integration of ecosystems research within public health research relating to AMR; and 5) parallels between ecosystem and other sciences (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Methods and resultsThe challenge of antimicrobial resistanceIncreasing awareness of the interdependence of human health with that of the ecosystems in which we live (Reid et al 2005, Lerner and Berg 2017) has underpinned the growth of interdisciplinary, holistic and multi-actor models of health, such as One Health, EcoHealth and Planetary Health (Zinsstag et al 2011, Gibbs 2014, Whitmee et al 2015, Lerner and Berg 2017, Prescott et al 2018). We interviewed 16 leading researchers (nine from ecology and seven from public health; Supporting information for details on methods and analysis, along with selected quotes referred to below) to explore the challenge of interdisciplinary research on AMR.

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