Developing public health risk messages about antibiotic resistance using metaphors: an international co-design and e-Delphi consensus study
This study addresses the persistent gap between the global threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and low public awareness by developing and systematically evaluating new metaphors to improve communication and encourage behaviour change. Through co-design workshops with members of the public and doctors in the UK and the public in South Africa (n=51 total), researchers generated 89 initial metaphors, expanded them with 101 additional suggestions, and then assessed their appropriateness via a three-round e-Delphi process involving 37 AMR communication experts from 27 countries. Using the UCLA/RAND method, 38 metaphors were endorsed for global use. Rather than relying on alarmist “war” or “doomsday” framing, the selected metaphors draw on relatable domains such as nature, tools and firefighting, offering culturally adaptable and constructive ways to explain AMR; the study provides a methodological blueprint for participatory, evidence-based health communication design.
AMR NEWS
Your Biweekly Source for Global AMR Insights!
Stay informed with the essential newsletter that brings together all the latest One Health news on antimicrobial resistance. Delivered straight to your inbox every two weeks, AMR NEWS provides a curated selection of international insights, key publications, and the latest updates in the fight against AMR.
Don’t miss out on staying ahead in the global AMR movement—subscribe now!



