Easton Stephanie, Pinchbeck Gina L, Bartley David J, Hotchkiss Emily, Hodgkinson Jane E, Matthews Jacqueline B
Moredun Research Institute, Pentlands Science Park, Midlothian EH26 0PZ, UK.
Institute of Infection and Global Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZJ, UK.
Prev Vet Med. 2016 Nov 1;134:69-81. doi: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2016.10.001. Epub 2016 Oct 5.
The aim of this study was to determine practices, attitudes and experiences of UK prescribers of anthelmintics for horses and livestock. A questionnaire was sent by direct email to groups licenced to prescribe these medicines. These were veterinarians, Suitably Qualified Persons (SQPs, registered with the Animal Medicines Training Regulatory Authority) and veterinary pharmacists. The survey was also advertised through social media. It comprised questions relating to demographics, training experiences, current prescribing practices, as well as personal opinions on anthelmintic selection, diagnostics and anthelmintic resistance. A total of 193 veterinarians and 326 SQPs were included in final analysis. Pharmacists were excluded from detailed analysis due to the low numbers that responded (n=3). The results indicated that SQP participants were more likely to receive post-certification parasitology training than the veterinarians, and that both channels consulted similar sources for information about helminths and their control (paper articles in journals, online sources). The SQP participants stated a higher frequency of face-to-face interactions with clients/customers (96.1%) than the veterinarians (76.4%), who stated a higher frequency of telephone interactions (55.1% and 73.5%, respectively). Veterinarians were more likely to state that there were specific factors that limited interactions with their clients (54.1%) than SQPs (19.6%), such as competition from other suppliers. SQP participants considered a wider range of factors as important when deciding on which anthelmintic to recommend (i.e. knowledge of specific parasites, knowledge of specific anthelmintics, discussion of measures to avoid anthelmintic resistance and time to talk with clients/customers); however, the veterinarian participants were more likely to consider the results of diagnostic tests. While discussions about anthelmintic resistance were stated with similar frequency in both groups, less frequent were specific discussions about anthelmintic sensitivity testing. In-house faecal egg count analysis was more likely to be available from those that prescribed anthelmintics for equines alone, compared to prescribers who dispensed anthelmintics for livestock alone or livestock and equines. The SQP participants indicated that they felt a large number of organisations were responsible for ensuring that anthelmintics are used responsibly, whilst veterinarian participants were more likely to place responsibility on the prescribers alone. Taken together, these findings provide an insight into how prescribers of anthelmintics in the UK interact with their clients/customers before and at the point of sale and act as a unique source of information on how best practice advice pertaining to sustainable helminth control is disseminated by the various prescribing channels.
本研究的目的是确定英国马匹和家畜驱虫药开处方者的做法、态度和经验。通过直接电子邮件向有执照开这些药物的群体发送了一份问卷。这些群体包括兽医、合格人员(SQPs,在动物药品培训监管局注册)和兽医药剂师。该调查也通过社交媒体进行了宣传。问卷包含有关人口统计学、培训经历、当前开处方做法的问题,以及关于驱虫药选择、诊断和驱虫药耐药性的个人意见。最终分析纳入了193名兽医和326名合格人员。由于回复的药剂师数量较少(n = 3),因此将其排除在详细分析之外。结果表明,合格人员参与者比兽医更有可能接受认证后的寄生虫学培训,并且两个群体在查阅关于蠕虫及其防治的信息来源方面相似(期刊上的纸质文章、在线资源)。合格人员参与者表示与客户/顾客进行面对面互动的频率更高(96.1%),而兽医表示电话互动的频率更高(分别为55.1%和73.5%)。兽医比合格人员更有可能表示存在限制与客户互动的特定因素(54.1%对19.6%),例如来自其他供应商的竞争。在决定推荐哪种驱虫药时,合格人员参与者认为更广泛的因素很重要(即对特定寄生虫的了解、对特定驱虫药的了解、关于避免驱虫药耐药性措施的讨论以及与客户/顾客交谈的时间);然而,兽医参与者更有可能考虑诊断测试的结果。虽然两组提及关于驱虫药耐药性讨论的频率相似,但关于驱虫药敏感性测试的具体讨论较少。与仅为家畜或家畜和马匹配给驱虫药的开处方者相比,仅为马匹开处方驱虫药的人更有可能进行内部粪便虫卵计数分析。合格人员参与者表示,他们认为有大量组织负责确保驱虫药的合理使用,而兽医参与者更有可能将责任仅归咎于开处方者。综上所述,这些发现深入了解了英国驱虫药开处方者在销售前和销售时如何与客户/顾客互动,并成为关于各种开处方渠道如何传播可持续蠕虫防治最佳实践建议的独特信息来源。