Crawford Paul E, Hamer Kim, Lovatt Fiona, Behnke Malgorzata C, Robinson Philip A
Department of Animal Health Behaviour and Welfare Harper Adams University Newport UK.
School of Biodiversity One Health and Veterinary Medicine College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences Garscube Campus, University of Glasgow Glasgow UK.
Vet Rec Open. 2024 Apr 12;11(1):e278. doi: 10.1002/vro2.78. eCollection 2024 Jun.
In order to improve antimicrobial stewardship (AMS), including changes in antimicrobial prescribing and use, an enhanced understanding is needed of the barriers that veterinary surgeons (vets) encounter to institute such change.
A qualitative approach, using grounded theory, was followed. Interviews and discussion groups, with vets and farm industry stakeholders in Northern Ireland (NI), were undertaken to identify and explore attitudes and behaviours surrounding AMS, with a particular emphasis on the barriers vets encountered and the context within which they were working.
Seven inter-related themes associated with improving AMS among their sheep farming clients were identified. The first six addressed barriers were working under commercial and practical constraints, farmer behaviour, multiple medicine sources, poor prescribing practice, a perceived lack of incentive or facilitation to improve AMS and a perceived lack of action by regulators to challenge poor AMS. The seventh theme revealed suggestions vets considered that may improve AMS in NI, including greater state intervention in recording and regulating medicine sales.
Improving AMS will require vets and their client farmers to change behaviour. This will involve concerted effort over an extended period of time to enact and embed change. Veterinary surgeons believe that further action by the industry and state to develop centralised antimicrobial sales recording and by the state to enforce prescribing regulations will aid their efforts. However, critical to achieving this is the development of a sustainable and funded mechanism to create more meaningful farmer-vet consultation around flock health prior to every prescription to improve AMS and sheep welfare.
为了改善抗菌药物管理(AMS),包括抗菌药物处方和使用方面的变化,需要更深入地了解兽医在实施此类变革时遇到的障碍。
采用基于扎根理论的定性方法。与北爱尔兰(NI)的兽医和农场行业利益相关者进行了访谈和讨论小组,以识别和探讨围绕AMS的态度和行为,特别强调兽医遇到的障碍以及他们工作的背景。
确定了与改善其养羊客户的AMS相关的七个相互关联的主题。前六个涉及的障碍是在商业和实际限制下工作、农民行为、多种药物来源、不良的处方习惯、认为缺乏改善AMS的激励或促进措施以及认为监管机构缺乏对不良AMS采取行动。第七个主题揭示了兽医认为可能改善NI地区AMS的建议,包括国家在记录和监管药品销售方面加大干预力度。
改善AMS需要兽医及其客户农民改变行为。这将需要在较长时间内齐心协力来制定和落实变革。兽医认为,该行业和国家进一步采取行动开发集中式抗菌药物销售记录,以及国家加强处方规定的执行,将有助于他们的努力。然而,实现这一目标的关键是建立一个可持续的、有资金支持的机制,以便在每次开处方前围绕羊群健康开展更有意义的农民-兽医咨询,以改善AMS和羊的福利。