Golding Sarah E, Ogden Jane, Higgins Helen M
School of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, Stag Hill Campus, University of Surrey, Guildford GU2 7XH, UK.
Institute of Infection, Veterinary and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Neston, Cheshire CH64 7TE, UK.
Antibiotics (Basel). 2021 Apr 15;10(4):445. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics10040445.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a pressing threat to public and animal health. There is evidence that antimicrobial prescribing and stewardship behaviors by veterinarians (vets) are influenced by non-clinical factors, such as psychological, social, and environmental factors. This study explored the role of context, beliefs, and values on vets' antimicrobial prescribing decisions. UK-based practicing farm vets ( = 97) were recruited to an online study. Using an experimental vignette methodology, vets were randomly assigned across four conditions, to examine the effects of different contexts (pressure on farm economics, the farmer, or the vet-farmer relationship, compared to a control condition) on vets' likelihood of prescribing antibiotics. Vets' beliefs about different groups' responsibility for causing and preventing AMR and vets' values were also measured. Key findings were that context alone, values, and beliefs about groups' responsibilities for causing AMR were not predictive of vets' likelihood of prescribing antibiotics. However, vets' beliefs about groups' responsibilities for preventing AMR were predictive of an increased likelihood of prescribing antibiotics, when vets were exposed to the experimental condition of the vignette in which the vet-farmer relationship was under pressure. Farm vets also believed that different groups have different levels of responsibility for causing and preventing AMR. Results should be interpreted cautiously, given the smaller than planned for sample size, and the possibility for both false negatives and false positives. Further research is needed to explore how these findings could inform antimicrobial stewardship interventions in veterinary medicine.
抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)对公共卫生和动物健康构成了紧迫威胁。有证据表明,兽医的抗菌药物处方和管理行为受到非临床因素的影响,如心理、社会和环境因素。本研究探讨了情境、信念和价值观在兽医抗菌药物处方决策中的作用。招募了97名英国执业农场兽医参与一项在线研究。采用实验性 vignette 方法,将兽医随机分配到四种情境中,以检验不同情境(与对照情境相比,农场经济压力、农场主压力或兽医与农场主关系压力)对兽医开具抗生素可能性的影响。还测量了兽医对不同群体在导致和预防 AMR 方面责任的信念以及兽医的价值观。主要发现是,仅情境、价值观以及对不同群体导致 AMR 责任的信念并不能预测兽医开具抗生素的可能性。然而,当兽医接触到 vignette 中兽医与农场主关系面临压力的实验情境时,兽医对不同群体预防 AMR 责任的信念能预测开具抗生素可能性的增加。农场兽医还认为不同群体在导致和预防 AMR 方面的责任程度不同。鉴于样本量小于计划,且存在假阴性和假阳性的可能性,对结果的解释应谨慎。需要进一步研究以探索这些发现如何为兽医学中的抗菌药物管理干预提供信息。