Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:9599...

Topic
Article
Author
Grakh, Kushal Mittal, Dinesh Kumar, Tarun Thakur, Swati Panwar, Diksha Singh, Lokender Kumar, Manesh Jindal, Naresh
Langue
en
Editor

MDPI

Category

Antibiotics

Year

2022

listing date

10/21/2023

Keywords
clean veterinary surgical resistance amr reported antimicrobial pet
Metrics

Abstract

The indiscriminate usage and overuse of antimicrobials in pets or companion animals are underlying causes of antimicrobial resistance (AMR).

Despite the multi-faceted global challenge presented by antimicrobial resistance, very few studies have appraised pet practitioners’ factors, such as written policy on antimicrobials, dose rate prescribed, use of critically important antimicrobials, and antimicrobial prescription in clean surgical procedures, which can contribute to AMR.

In the present study, an online cross-sectional survey among randomly selected pet practitioners (n = 104) of various Indian provinces and union territories was conducted using a questionnaire comprising 33 closed-ended questions on different parameters, viz., the dosage regimen and level of compliance towards guidelines of the World Health Organization (WHO), other relevant veterinary associations, and their opinion while prescribing antimicrobials.

Almost every practitioner of the 104 respondents had revealed the difficulties with owner compliance; i.e., incomplete course of the antibiotics, inappropriate follow-ups, and improper care of the sick animals.

The majority of practitioners (95%) reported self-prescription of antimicrobials by the owner before presenting the pet(s) to the veterinary clinic, whereas more than half of the respondents (64%) revealed unavailability of antibiogram facilities.

Furthermore, a large number (76%) of practitioners stated empirical treatment based on their experience as the main criteria for antimicrobial choice in the absence of timely results from the laboratory.

Although non-necessitated use of antimicrobials in clean surgical procedures has been claimed, surprisingly, the majority of pet practitioners (97%) reported their use to reduce the post-operative complications.

The use of the highest priority, critically important antimicrobials (HPCIA) listed by the WHO for humans, particularly quinolones and third-generation cephalosporin, also has been reported for different infections.

The treatment durations were nearly as per the recommended guidelines issued by the Danish Small Animal Veterinary Association (DSAVA) for different ailments.

Analysis using chi-square tests exhibited a significant correlation between less experienced veterinarians (less than 5 years) and prescription of antimicrobials restricted for critically important infections in human medicine.

However, there seems to be no association between the experience of the practitioner and the further studied parameters, namely, antimicrobial regimen prescription, weighing the animals before prescription, dose rate calculation, and antimicrobial selection and use after clean surgical operations.

The findings suggest periodic awareness campaigns among practitioners regarding the implementation of the official guidelines, the need for systematic surveillance of AMR, awareness among pet owners about antimicrobial resistance, and the importance of rational use of antimicrobials on their pets.

Grakh, Kushal,Mittal, Dinesh,Kumar, Tarun,Thakur, Swati,Panwar, Diksha,Singh, Lokender,Kumar, Manesh,Jindal, Naresh, 2022, Attitude, Opinions, and Working Preferences Survey among Pet Practitioners Relating to Antimicrobials in India, MDPI

Document

Open Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

A Novel MR Imaging Sequence of 3D-ZOOMit Real Inversion-Recovery Imaging Improves Endolymphatic Hydrops Detection in Patients with Ménière Disease
ménière disease p < detection imaging sequences 3d-zoomit 3d endolymphatic real tse reconstruction ir inversion-recovery hydrops ratio
Successful omental flap coverage repair of a rectovaginal fistula after low anterior resection: a case report
rectovaginal fistula rectal cancer low anterior resection omental flap muscle flap rectal cancer pod initial repair rvf flap omental lar coverage