Babo Martins Sara, Sucena Afonso João, Fastl Christina, Huntington Benjamin, Rushton Jonathan
Institute of Infection, Veterinary and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Global Burden of Animal Diseases Programme, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
One Health. 2024 Oct 15;19:100917. doi: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2024.100917. eCollection 2024 Dec.
In addition to affecting animal health and production, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in livestock can have far-reaching social and economic consequences, including on human health and the environment. Given the diversity of data needs and the absence of standardised methodologies, the scale of antimicrobial use (AMU) and AMR's social and economic burden on livestock is complex to gauge. Yet, quantifying this impact can be an essential input for farm-level decision-making and, more widely, for policy development, public awareness, resource allocation to interventions and research and development prioritisation, particularly in a One Health context. This work proposes a conceptual framework to guide the assessment of the burden of AMU and AMR in livestock using the Global Burden of Animal Diseases (GBADs) approach. Its development identified and mapped critical socio-economic concepts in AMU and AMR in livestock and their relationships. The Animal Health Loss Envelope (AHLE), a monetary metric that sets a boundary for overall losses from health hazards and allows an understanding of the relative importance of health problems in livestock, was used as the metric in which the concepts and data needs for the AMU and AMR assessment were anchored. The proposed framework identifies pathways for losses and data inputs needed to estimate the burden of AMU and AMR within this wider envelope of losses. These include information on health expenditure and mortality and morbidity effects related to AMR in livestock. This work highlights the need for improved health and production data collection in livestock production as an essential stepping stone to accurately producing AMU and AMR burden estimates.
除了影响动物健康和生产外,家畜中的抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)还会产生深远的社会和经济后果,包括对人类健康和环境的影响。鉴于数据需求的多样性以及缺乏标准化方法,抗菌药物使用(AMU)的规模以及AMR对家畜造成的社会和经济负担难以衡量。然而,量化这种影响对于农场层面的决策,以及更广泛地对于政策制定、公众意识、干预措施的资源分配和研发优先级确定而言,可能是一项至关重要的投入,尤其是在“同一健康”背景下。这项工作提出了一个概念框架,以指导采用全球动物疾病负担(GBADs)方法评估家畜中AMU和AMR的负担。其制定过程确定并绘制了家畜中AMU和AMR的关键社会经济概念及其相互关系。动物健康损失范围(AHLE)是一种货币指标,它为健康危害造成的总体损失设定了界限,并有助于理解家畜健康问题的相对重要性,被用作锚定AMU和AMR评估的概念和数据需求的指标。拟议的框架确定了在这一更广泛的损失范围内估算AMU和AMR负担所需的损失途径和数据输入。这些包括与家畜AMR相关的健康支出以及死亡率和发病率影响的信息。这项工作强调了改善家畜生产中健康和生产数据收集的必要性,这是准确估算AMU和AMR负担的重要基石。