European Partnership on One Health Antimicrobial Resistance

Accessibility to ohamr.eu

The Swedish Research Council is responsible for this website. We want as many people as possible to be able to use the website.

Here we describe how ohamr.eu complies with the law governing accessibility to digital public services, any known accessibility problems, and how to report problems to us so that we can correct them.

How accessible is the website?

We are aware that parts of the website are not fully accessible. For further information, please see the section below on content that is not accessible.

What can you do if you cannot use parts of the website?

If you need content from ohamr.eu that is not accessible to you, but is excluded from the law’s area of application according to the description below, then please contact us as follows:

Supervision

The Agency for Digital Government is responsible for supervising the Swedish law governing accessibility to digital public services (Lag (2018:1937) om tillgänglighet till digital offentlig service). If you are not satisfied with how we handle your comments, you can contact the Agency for Digital Government to let them know.

Content that is not accessible

This website does comply in part with the law governing accessibility to digital public services, due to the problems described below.

Non-compliance with the legal requirements

Problems when using without vision

The web form for signing up for the newsletter has shortcomings in the markup of the code, which becomes problematic for screen readers when handling errors. It is not visible in the text which fields are mandatory or optional.

Problems when using with impaired vision

  • It happens that the website does not respect the user’s settings, which means that it is not possible to use, for example, dark mode.
  • The web form for signing up for the newsletter has shortcomings in the markup of the code, which becomes problematic for screen readers when handling errors. It is not visible in the text which fields are mandatory or optional.

Problems when using with reduced color vision

It happens that the website does not respect the user’s settings, which means that it is not possible to use, for example, dark mode.

Problems with use with cognitive impairment

  • It happens that the website does not respect the user’s settings, which means that it is not possible to use, for example, dark mode.
  • The web form for signing up for the newsletter has shortcomings in the markup of the code, which becomes problematic for screen readers when handling errors. It is not visible in the text which fields are mandatory or optional.

How we tested the website

When the website was developed, the design as well as each component and feature was accessibility tested. Before launch of the website an accessibility expert reviewed the website as a whole. The review scrutinised a number of representative pages and important features.

The Swedish Research Council tasked an external actor to make corrections. This actor made and reviewed the corrections, and delivered them on May 28 2025. Ahead of the delivery of these corrections, the Swedish Research Council also carried out its own testing.

The main reasons why accessibility problems still remain on ohamr.eu are that the problems are either of a type that requires major resources to correct, or of a type that we do not yet know how best to correct.

It is our ambition to have corrected all known accessibility problems no later than November 15 2025.

New features and other factors that can create accessibility problems are reviewed continuously by the Swedish Research Council.

The website was published on June 2nd 2025.

The accessibility report was updated most recently on May 28th 2025.