Antibiotic optimisation in ‘the bush’
Local know-how and core-periphery relations.
Broom, A., Broom, J., Kirby, E., G
Health & Place 2017
Abstract
The growing global concern around antimicrobial mis-use and proliferating resistance has resulted in increasing interest in optimising antibiotics, particularly in hospitals. While the agenda to tighten antibiotic use has been critically explored in metropolitan settings, the dynamics of rural and remote settings have remained largely unexplored. Drawing on 30 interviews with doctors, nurses, and pharmacists in a remote Australian hospital, we focus on the pertinence of setting, and its importance for contextualising and potentially achieving antibiotic optimisation. Building on previous work on the dynamics of locale and core-periphery relations, here we consider how antimicrobial practice is deeply embedded in experiences of being on the geographical periphery, and crucially, at the periphery of (established) knowledge.
Commentary
The latest commentary on the use of antimicrobials in society.
Fresh Perspectives
Antimicrobials are central to many contemporary forms of care and production for humans, animals, plants and even objects – clothing,...
The Third Man: How are we entwined with...
A film event and panel discussion for World Antibiotics Awareness Week 2017
Sustainable aquaculture in Bangladesh
Rather than asking how antibiotics enable livelihoods in situations of increasing precarity, our research asks whether it is possible to...