Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Stakeholder position paper: companion animal veterinarian.
- Journal:
- Preventive veterinary medicine
- Year:
- 2006
- Authors:
- DeVincent, Stephen J & Reid-Smith, Richard
- Affiliation:
- 26 Montgomery Street · United States
Plain-English summary
This paper discusses the use of antibiotics in pets, which is generally much lower than in farm animals. In pets, antibiotics are mainly used to treat illnesses, while in farm animals, they are often used to prevent disease and promote growth. There is a significant lack of data on how antibiotics are used in pets in the U.S., which makes it hard to understand the risks of antibiotic resistance, where bacteria become resistant to treatments. Pets can carry bacteria that can be passed to humans, and their use of antibiotics can contribute to this problem. The authors suggest that collecting better data on antibiotic use in pets could help veterinarians understand and manage the risks associated with antibiotic resistance.
Abstract
The total quantity of use in companion animals is generally believed to be relatively small in comparison with antimicrobial use in food animals. Use in companion animals is principally for treatment, whereas the greater proportion of use in food animals is for prophylaxis, metaphylaxis and growth promotion. Therefore, it is important to collect data on end use in companion animals so that overall estimates of use in companion animals can be generated and separated from estimates for food animals. However, data from antimicrobial use in companion animals are extremely limited and no serious attempts to collect such data have ever been made in the United States. The lack of usage data in is concomitant with the dearth of information on antimicrobial resistance in companion animals. Companion animals have been involved in the transmission to humans of, or become infected with, foodborne zoonotic bacteria such as Salmonella and Campylobacter. Companion animals are an integral part of the ecology of antimicrobial resistance through their contact with food animals and exposure to antimicrobials for disease treatment and through contact with humans and the environment. In the practice of companion animal medicine, antimicrobial use data are important for understanding the potential impact on companion animal heath posed by antimicrobial resistance transferred from food animals, humans and the environment, and the threat to humans and other companion animals posed by antimicrobial use in companion animals. Basic information on the patterns and quantities of antimicrobial use in combination with resistance surveillance data, could help companion animal veterinarians understand the potential for development, or evidence of, an antimicrobial resistance problem in their practices, the role of companion animals in the overall epidemiology of antimicrobial resistance, and for comparison with local, regional, or national data. The combination of data from either a sentinel site system of clinics or a use survey with national data from the pharmaceutical industry should provide sufficient data to credibly estimate the total volume and patterns of antimicrobial use in companion animal medicine. The time and effort for use monitoring or to complete a survey would likely become burdensome. Practice management software now utilized at most companion animal clinics could be used to generate antimicrobial use data as well as patient population data as surrogate for the true population at risk for patient encounters in a companion animal practice.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16290231/