Optimising antibiotic prescribing: Collective approaches to managing a common-pool resource. C Tarrant AM Colman E Chattoe-Brown DR Jenkins S Mehtar N Perera EM Krockow 2381/44546 https://figshare.le.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/Optimising_antibiotic_prescribing_Collective_approaches_to_managing_a_common-pool_resource_/10209377 BACKGROUND: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the greatest threats in 21st century medicine. AMR has been characterised as a social dilemma. A familiar version describes the situation in which a collective resource (in this case, antibiotic efficacy) is exhausted due to over-exploitation. The dilemma arises because individuals are motivated to maximise individual payoffs, although the collective outcome is worse if all act in this way. OBJECTIVES: We aim to outline the implications for antimicrobial stewardship of characterising antibiotic overuse as a social dilemma. SOURCES: We conducted a narrative review of the literature on interventions to promote the conservation of resources in social dilemmas. CONTENT: The social dilemma of antibiotic over-use is complicated by the lack of visibility and imminence of AMR, a loose coupling between individual actions and the outcome of AMR, and the agency relationships inherent in the prescriber role. We identify seven strategies for shifting prescriber behaviour and promoting a focus on the collectively desirable outcome of conservation of antibiotic efficacy: (1) establish clearly defined boundaries and access rights; (2) raise the visibility and imminence of the problem; (3) enable collective choice arrangements; (4) conduct behaviour-based monitoring; (5) use social and reputational incentives and sanctions; (6) address misalignment of goals and incentives; and (7) provide conflict resolution mechanisms. IMPLICATIONS: We conclude that this theoretic analysis of antibiotic stewardship could make the problem of optimising antibiotic prescribing more tractable, providing a theory base for intervention development. 2019-06-21 14:29:39 antibiotic antimicrobial resistance cooperation prescribing social dilemma