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Antibiotics are the basis of modern medicine. These projects aim to keep it that way.

Wherever we live, we can no longer be certain that in future antibiotics will continue to cure infections caused by bacteria. The increasing resistance of bacteria to the medicines we have is undermining healthcare around the world. But we are not powerless against antibiotic resistance.

Maroon plaque on St Mary's Hospital London commemorating discovery in 1928 of penicillin by Alexander Fleming

Pioneering projects in different countries are using innovative grassroots approaches to change people's attitudes and behaviour so that the antibiotics we have remain effective for as long as possible.

These initiatives meet local needs and circumstances, but they could be copied, adapted and replicated for use in other countries.

You are free to use any of the information on this page to increase the impact of your own work around drug-resistant infections.

Tanzania: changing the way shop owners dispense antibiotics 

The problem

  • People in Tanzania can buy antibiotics from unregulated local shops, fuelling a rise in antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

The approach

  • Since 2003, the Accredited Drug Dispensing Outlets (ADDOs) programme has trained shop owners about the dangers of customers misusing antibiotics. 
  • Using dispensing guides, posters, information cards and medicine label stamps, the shop owners educate their customers about how to take antibiotics properly and about any side-effects to expect.

The story so far

  • Trained drug dispensers are working in more than 12,000 shops around Tanzania.
  • Inappropriate dispensing has fallen sharply and the availability of antibiotics for people who need them has risen.
  • The scheme, which has been running since 2003, has been copied in other countries, including Nigeria, Uganda, Zambia and Bangladesh.

The project's backers

  • The government of Tanzania; the Pharmacy Council; international NGO Management Sciences for Health.

Find out more about the project

India: partnering with young children to develop grassroots comics 

Indian schoolchildren creating comics with paper and pens.
Schoolchildren in Hyderabad, India, creating grassroots comics on superbugs.
Credit: Superheroes Against Superbugs

The problem

  • India is the largest consumer of antibiotics but an estimated 64% of the antibiotics used aren't approved medicines.
  • India is also a major manufacturer of antibiotics, which creates polluting byproducts that exacerbate the growth of resistant bacteria.

The approach

  • Launched in 2018, Superheroes Against Superbugs (SaS) aims to raise awareness about antibiotic resistance, and promote community dialogue and action by engaging young children in India.
  • Fun, hands-on activities provide schoolchildren with the scientific knowledge and tools to influence their family's and friends' behaviour.
  • Group activities with scientists and doctors teach the children taking part about microbes and antibiotic resistance, and how this could affect them and their families.The children then use their creativity to make pen and paper comics on superbugs that can be reproduced and exhibited.

The story so far

  • Sixty children from two schools have taken part in two-day workshops and produced comic stories that show a proper understanding of the complexities of antibiotic resistance.
  • The SaS team have also organised awareness activities at school festivals and public events in Hyderabad and Delhi.
  • SaS has developed a website to share its educational and engagement resources with the wider community.

The project's backers

  • World Comics India; Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad; The George Institute for Global Health; Wellcome Trust/DBT India Alliance.

Find out more about the project

South Africa: empowering hospital pharmacists to advise on antibiotics 

The problem

  • A lack of data, infectious diseases expertise and resources, plus hospital networks spread over large areas, are a barrier to implementing antibiotic stewardship programmes in South Africa's public and private hospitals.

The approach

  • Hospital pharmacists in the emergency wards of a private hospital in Johannesburg were allocated time to trial interventions to reduce inappropriate use of antibiotics. For example, testing to see if infections would respond to antibiotics, and changing how many antibiotics were given at once and for how long. 

The story so far

  • Pharmacists' professional credibility and knowledge has increased, and they are now engaging more with doctors and patients to advise about antibiotic use.
  • Antibiotic consumption, and drug-resistant infections and their associated costs, have fallen.
  • The initiative has been expanded across hospitals in the private Netcare group, and into South Africa's public hospitals.

The project's backers

  • Netcare Antimicrobial Stewardship Study Alliance; Ampath Laboratories.

Find out more about the project

Innovation is key to tackling antimicrobial resistance and there are fantastic examples of this happening in communities all around the world. We must find a way to unite, to learn from one another and to scale up these ideas to address the global threat.

Professor Dame Sally Davies, UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance

Bangladesh: running community dialogues about antibiotic resistance 

Illustration of a woman with a flipchart talking to a seated group in a village
Credit: Malaria Consortium

The problem

  • Many people in Bangladesh self-medicate and use over-the-counter antibiotics inappropriately. There is a weak surveillance system, plus unchecked use of antibiotics in farming.

The approach

  • The Community Dialogue Approach trains community-based volunteers to run regular meetings to work out ways to stop the spread of antibiotic resistance.
  • Villages in the catchment areas of five community clinics chose volunteers who learned about the correct use of antibiotics, plus communication and facilitation skills. The volunteers, supported by supervisors, were equipped with a flipchart that illustrates key messages and stimulates discussion.
  • Community dialogues give people the chance to explore health issues affecting the community collectively, identify locally relevant solutions and reach decisions about what the community could do to improve the issue.

The story so far

  • From April to October 2018, 55 volunteers held close to 450 community dialogues in Comilla District, Bangladesh.
  • Decisions documented by communities included not buying antibiotics without a prescription, visiting the community clinic if unwell, and encouraging handwashing among community members.

The project's backers

  • Nuffield Centre for International Health and Development, University of Leeds, UK; ARK Foundation; Malaria Consortium.

Find out more about the project