Citizen Science to Raise Antimicrobial Resistance Awareness in the Community: The MicroMundo Project in Spain and Portugal
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Antibiotic resistance Citizen Science Drug discovery Education One health
Fecha
2025-03-04Referencia bibliográfica
Gil-Serna, Jessica et al. Citizen Science to Raise Antimicrobial Resistance Awareness in the Community: The MicroMundo Project in Spain and Portugal. Microbial Biotechnology Volume 18, Issue 3 e70123. 2025. https://doi.org/10.1111/1751-7915.70123
Patrocinador
Universidad de Valencia, UV-SFPIE_PID21-CON-1641321, UV-SFPIE_PID22-CON-2075782, UV-SFPIE_PID23-PIEE-2730346, UV-SFPIE_RMD17-588566, UV-SFPIE_RMD18-839102; Universidad de Zaragoza, PIIDUZ_19_01, PIIDUZ_21_ID66, PIIDUZ_22_921, PIIDUZ_2_4690; Universidad de Salamanca, ID2018/143, ID2019_036; Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, LA/P/0087/2020, PTDC/BIA-MIC/2422/2020, UIDB/04612/2020, UIDP/04612/2020; Universidad de Alcalá, UAHEV/1484; Fundación Española para la Ciencia y la Tecnología, FCT-17-12215, FCT-18-13055, FCT-19-14673, FCT-19-14737, FCT-21-17093, FCT-22-17907, FCT-22-18062; Xunta de Galicia, PR804A 2020-20, PR804A 2021-19, PR804A 2022-22, PR804A 2023-23, PR804A 2024-19Resumen
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a global threat to human, animal and environmental health. Among the multidisciplinary tasks aimed at collectively tackling the AMR crisis, surveillance, research and education stand as major priorities. Based on a crowdsourcing research strategy, the MicroMundo project, a partner of the Tiny Earth initiative in Spain and Portugal, has been developed and consolidated with success in the academic environment. The objectives are focused on promoting research and, especially, on bringing knowledge of One Health and microbiology concepts, as well as AMR awareness to the community. Following a service-learning approach, MicroMundo integrates university and secondary/high school students in a citizen science-based research project to collectively isolate microorganisms with the potential to produce new antibiotics from soil environments. Over the last 7 years, 32 MicroMundo hubs operating across 31 different Portuguese and Spanish universities have recruited thousands of teenagers in this quest. Here we review the outcome of this unprecedented effort from a scientific and an educational perspective.