希腊小动物兽医的抗菌做法:一项调查。

One Health Outlook Pub Date : 2020-05-18 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s42522-020-00013-8
George Valiakos, Eleni Pavlidou, Christos Zafeiridis, Constantina N Tsokana, Victor J Del Rio Vilas
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引用次数: 11

摘要

背景:抗生素的不当使用是希腊临床实践中的一个主要问题,严重影响公共卫生和动物健康。本研究的目的是首次深入了解希腊小动物从业人员使用抗生素的情况,并评估他们对合理使用抗生素的一般规则的遵守情况。这是希腊首次进行此类调查。方法:采用问卷调查法收集宠物兽医抗菌药物使用情况。问卷共发送给主要在Attica地区工作的70名兽医,该地区占希腊人口的近50%,兽医仅从事小动物实践。问卷由37个封闭式问题组成,涉及抗生素使用的各个方面。结果:大多数从业人员报告了宠物主人在没有兽医处方的情况下开始抗生素治疗的病例。几乎每个临床医生都报告了业主合规方面的挑战。在微生物分析方面,73%的应答者在等待实验室结果时开始经验性治疗,或仅在治疗不成功时才使用抗生素。88%的人表示在术后清洁外科手术中使用抗菌剂。对于各种器官系统,如泌尿系统和胃肠道感染,优选不同类型的抗菌素和治疗时间,而不是合理使用抗生素指南所建议的抗菌素。结论:我们的研究结果表明,希腊需要制定小动物实践中抗生素使用指南,并部署对抗生素使用和耐药性的系统监测,以便根据当地抗生素耐药性概况为抗生素的初步选择提供信息。针对问题的另一端——宠物主人,我们的研究结果表明,有必要教育他们合理使用抗生素,更重要的是,停止在没有处方的情况下使用抗生素。
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Antimicrobial practices among small animal veterinarians in Greece: a survey.

Background: The inappropriate use of antibiotics is a major issue in clinical practice in Greece with serious implications for public health and animal health. The purpose of the present study was to provide a first insight into the use of antibiotics by small animal practitioners in Greece and assess their compliance with general rules for the rational use of antibiotics. This is the first survey of its kind in Greece.

Methods: A questionnaire was designed to collect basic information on the use of antibiotics by pet veterinarians. The questionnaire was sent to a total of 70 veterinarians mainly operating in the region of Attica, a region that comprises almost 50% of the Greek population and where veterinarians are engaged solely in small animal practice. The questionnaire consisted of 37 closed questions dealing with various aspects on the use of antibiotics.

Results: The majority of practitioners report cases where the pet owner initiated antibiotic treatment without veterinary prescription. Almost every clinician reported owner-compliance challenges. Regarding microbiological analysis, 73% of respondents initiate empirical treatment while waiting for laboratory results or use antibiogram only when the treatment is unsuccessful. Eighty-eight per cent declared to use antimicrobials postoperatively in clean surgical procedures. Different types of antimicrobials and treatment durations than the ones proposed by guidelines on rational use of antibiotics are preferred for various organ systems e.g. in urinary and gastrointestinal infections.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest the need for guidelines on antibiotic use in small animal practice in Greece, and the deployment of systematic surveillance on antimicrobials use and resistance to inform the initial choice of antibiotics upon local antimicrobial resistance profiles. Targeting the other end of the problem, pet owners, our findings indicate the need to educate them on the rational use of antibiotics and, critically, stop antibiotic availability without prescription.

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