Albernaz-Gonçalves Rita, Olmos Antillón Gabriela, Hötzel Maria José
Laboratório de Etologia Aplicada e Bem-Estar Animal, Departamento de Zootecnia e Desenvolvimento Rural, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, SC, Brazil.
Instituto Federal Catarinense, Campus Santa Rosa do Sul, Santa Rosa do Sul, SC, Brazil.
Front Vet Sci. 2022 Sep 16;9:980546. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2022.980546. eCollection 2022.
Overuse of veterinary antibiotics is a risk factor for antimicrobial resistance (AMR), which is a global public health emergency. More than 70% of the antibiotics consumed worldwide are used in farm animals, mainly in poultry and pig herds. Brazil is the fourth largest pork producer globally and the second-largest user of antibiotics in animals. Qualitative research can help understand the complexities around antibiotic use (AMU) in Brazilian pig herds and identify stakeholders' attitudes concerning the rational AMU and AMR in the production chain. This study aimed to explore the knowledge and attitudes of high-level professionals in the animal production chain about AMU and AMR in pig farming, the relationship with pig welfare and AMU in Brazil. We conducted 32 in-depth interviews with individuals active in the pig industry. The majority of the participants considered AMU excessive and inappropriate in pig farms in Brazil. However, attitudes toward a restrictive AMU scenario in Brazilian pig farms were predominantly negative, justified by economic, sanitary and social barriers. These included unsatisfactory management and biosecurity conditions in pig farms that, in their opinion, justify AMU to prevent diseases; issues surrounding prescription and acquisition of veterinary drugs; and employment and income relationships arising from the sale of antibiotics. The views of high-level professionals in the Brazilian livestock chain reveal antibiotics as a structural element that enables pig production. Antibiotics were viewed as essential resources for producing cheap food. Foreign markets were considered the most relevant driver of change in AMU practices rather than pressure from Brazilian consumers. A common belief expressed was that AMR is more associated with the inappropriate AMU in human medicine than in the livestock sector. Resistance to change in these stakeholders may hinder the implementation of future public policies to restrict the use of antibiotics in Brazil. Our findings suggest that successful measures to deal with the AMU/AMR challenges in the pig chain shall not be rooted in personal behavior change. Instead, honest interdisciplinary dialogues and structural changes are needed to define common grounds and a way forward to break the cycle perpetuating antibiotics as structural commodities.
兽用抗生素的过度使用是抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)的一个风险因素,而抗菌药物耐药性是一个全球公共卫生紧急事件。全球消耗的抗生素中超过70%用于农场动物,主要是家禽和猪群。巴西是全球第四大猪肉生产国,也是动物抗生素的第二大使用国。定性研究有助于了解巴西猪群抗生素使用(AMU)的复杂性,并确定利益相关者对生产链中合理使用抗生素和抗菌药物耐药性的态度。本研究旨在探讨动物生产链中的高级专业人员对养猪业中抗生素使用和抗菌药物耐药性的知识和态度,以及在巴西与猪福利和抗生素使用的关系。我们对活跃于养猪行业的个人进行了32次深入访谈。大多数参与者认为巴西养猪场的抗生素使用过度且不当。然而,对于巴西养猪场实行限制性抗生素使用方案的态度主要是否定的,理由是经济、卫生和社会障碍。这些障碍包括养猪场管理和生物安全条件不尽人意,他们认为这证明使用抗生素预防疾病是合理的;围绕兽药处方和采购的问题;以及抗生素销售产生的就业和收入关系。巴西畜牧链中高级专业人员的观点表明,抗生素是实现生猪生产的一个结构性要素。抗生素被视为生产廉价食品的必要资源。外国市场被认为是抗生素使用做法变化的最相关驱动因素,而不是巴西消费者的压力。一种普遍的看法是,抗菌药物耐药性更多地与人用药物中不当使用抗生素有关,而非畜牧部门。这些利益相关者对变革的抵制可能会阻碍巴西未来限制抗生素使用的公共政策的实施。我们的研究结果表明,应对生猪链中抗生素使用/抗菌药物耐药性挑战的成功措施不应基于个人行为改变。相反,需要进行坦诚的跨学科对话和结构性变革,以确定共同基础和前进方向,打破将抗生素作为结构性商品长期存在的循环。