Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) is a global health emergency that threatens modern medicine and incurs great cost to human health. The World Health Organization as part of a quadripartite joint initiative with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, World Organisation for Animal Health, and United Nations Environment Programme, has recently published a One Health Priority Research Agenda for AMR. In this article we present a multidisciplinary approach, proposed by behavioural science experts, One Health experts and AMR experts to support the implementation of the Priority Research Agenda. We review, using specific examples of complex interventions designed to tackle AMR in which behavioural science has been embedded, five main steps: Define - what behaviours are a priority in each context; Diagnose - What are the barriers and enablers to the behaviours prioritised? Design - what interventions exist and what new or enhanced interventions could work to tackle the barriers identified? and, Implement and Evaluate the intervention(s). The approach presented will be useful for funders and researchers who wish to incorporate methods, frameworks and insights from the behavioural sciences into research plans, proposals and protocols in relation to a multisectoral One Health agenda and produce findings that are more relevant to policymakers.
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR); Behavioural science; One Health; Priority research agenda.
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