Implementing antimicrobial stewardship programs in veterinary practices
Laura Y. Hardefeldt
Highlights
Comprehensive antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) have been widely implemented in medical practice over the past decade to improve antimicrobial prescribing and reduce the pressure on the development of antimicrobial resistance. Most global and national action plans have called for implementation of ASPs in veterinary practices. Despite these calls, implementation of comprehensive ASPs in veterinary practices remains uncommon.
Medical ASPs have involved using restrictive interventions, which reduce the freedom of prescribers to select some antimicrobials, and persuasive interventions, which are aimed at driving behavioural change. Persuasive interventions are focused on addressing predisposing factors (practitioner education), reinforcing factors (audit and feedback) and enabling factors (decision support). Many ASPs have elements of both restriction and persuasion, but neither of these elements has been found to be more successful than the other over the long term. The main driver of ASPs has typically been the need to prevent future outbreaks of nosocomial multidrug-resistant infections in hospitals, with a secondary goal of reducing hospital costs without adversely affecting quality of care. Increasingly, ASPs are mandated by regulatory bodies that fund medical hospitals. While regulation does assist in ensuring widespread implementation of ASPs, the consistent financial benefits of effectively established ASPs have meant that many of these programs can be self-supporting in both large and small hospitals. There is strong evidence in the medical literature that planned interventions can change prescribing practices and can control infectious disease outcomes. While there are several opinion articles in the literature addressing antimicrobial stewardship in veterinary practice, there are no reports of hospital-style ASPs being implemented in veterinary...
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Citation: Hardefeldt, L.Y. (2018). Implementing antimicrobial stewardship programmes in veterinary practices. Veterinary Record, 182(24), 688-690. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/vr.k2563.








