Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Standard

Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds. / Skjølstrup, Nanna K.; Nielsen, Liza R.; Jensen, Carsten S.; Lastein, Dorte B.

In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science, Vol. 7, 547975, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Skjølstrup, NK, Nielsen, LR, Jensen, CS & Lastein, DB 2021, 'Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds', Frontiers in Veterinary Science, vol. 7, 547975. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.547975

APA

Skjølstrup, N. K., Nielsen, L. R., Jensen, C. S., & Lastein, D. B. (2021). Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 7, [547975]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.547975

Vancouver

Skjølstrup NK, Nielsen LR, Jensen CS, Lastein DB. Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds. Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2021;7. 547975. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2020.547975

Author

Skjølstrup, Nanna K. ; Nielsen, Liza R. ; Jensen, Carsten S. ; Lastein, Dorte B. / Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds. In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2021 ; Vol. 7.

Bibtex

@article{d960fc92b2ba4666897cb30fe57a1c2d,
title = "Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds",
abstract = "The globally increasing level of antimicrobial resistance affects both human and animal health, why it is necessary to identify ways to change our current use of antimicrobials. The veterinary herd health collaboration between veterinarians and dairy farmers provides a useful setting for changing antimicrobial use in livestock. However, farmers and veterinarians work in a complex agricultural setting influenced by socio-economic factors, which complicates their choices regarding antimicrobial usage. It is therefore necessary to be aware of the range of potential influencing factors and to integrate this knowledge in the relevant local settings. This manuscript presents a literature review of relevant factors relating to antimicrobial use within the veterinary herd health consultancy setting, including knowledge gaps of relevance for changing the use of antimicrobials. An enriched version of the framework of the Theory of Planned Behaviour was used to organise the literature review. We identified diverging attitudes on correct treatment practices and perceptions of antimicrobial resistance among veterinarians and farmers, influenced by individual risk perception as well as social norms. Furthermore, disagreements in terms of goal setting and in the frequency of herd visits in relation to herd health consultancy can negatively influence the collaboration and the intention to change antimicrobial use. Farmers and veterinarians emphasise the importance of legislation and the role of the dairy industry in changing antimicrobial use, but the relevance of specific factors depends on the country-specific context. Overall, farmers and veterinarians must communicate better to understand each other's perspectives and establish common goals within the collaboration if they are to work efficiently to reduce antimicrobial use. Farmers and veterinarians both requested changes in individual behaviour; however, they also called for national and structural solutions in terms of balanced legislation and the availability of better diagnostics to facilitate a change in antimicrobial use practices. These various paths to achieving the desired changes in antimicrobial use illustrate the need to bridge methodological research approaches of veterinary science and social sciences for a better understanding of our potential to change antimicrobial use within the dairy farm animal sector.",
keywords = "antimicrobial resistance, antimicrobial use, dairy cattle, decision-making, farmers, social factors, veterinarians, veterinary herd health consultancy",
author = "Skj{\o}lstrup, {Nanna K.} and Nielsen, {Liza R.} and Jensen, {Carsten S.} and Lastein, {Dorte B.}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3389/fvets.2020.547975",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "Frontiers in Veterinary Science",
issn = "2297-1769",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Veterinary Herd Health Consultancy and Antimicrobial Use in Dairy Herds

AU - Skjølstrup, Nanna K.

AU - Nielsen, Liza R.

AU - Jensen, Carsten S.

AU - Lastein, Dorte B.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The globally increasing level of antimicrobial resistance affects both human and animal health, why it is necessary to identify ways to change our current use of antimicrobials. The veterinary herd health collaboration between veterinarians and dairy farmers provides a useful setting for changing antimicrobial use in livestock. However, farmers and veterinarians work in a complex agricultural setting influenced by socio-economic factors, which complicates their choices regarding antimicrobial usage. It is therefore necessary to be aware of the range of potential influencing factors and to integrate this knowledge in the relevant local settings. This manuscript presents a literature review of relevant factors relating to antimicrobial use within the veterinary herd health consultancy setting, including knowledge gaps of relevance for changing the use of antimicrobials. An enriched version of the framework of the Theory of Planned Behaviour was used to organise the literature review. We identified diverging attitudes on correct treatment practices and perceptions of antimicrobial resistance among veterinarians and farmers, influenced by individual risk perception as well as social norms. Furthermore, disagreements in terms of goal setting and in the frequency of herd visits in relation to herd health consultancy can negatively influence the collaboration and the intention to change antimicrobial use. Farmers and veterinarians emphasise the importance of legislation and the role of the dairy industry in changing antimicrobial use, but the relevance of specific factors depends on the country-specific context. Overall, farmers and veterinarians must communicate better to understand each other's perspectives and establish common goals within the collaboration if they are to work efficiently to reduce antimicrobial use. Farmers and veterinarians both requested changes in individual behaviour; however, they also called for national and structural solutions in terms of balanced legislation and the availability of better diagnostics to facilitate a change in antimicrobial use practices. These various paths to achieving the desired changes in antimicrobial use illustrate the need to bridge methodological research approaches of veterinary science and social sciences for a better understanding of our potential to change antimicrobial use within the dairy farm animal sector.

AB - The globally increasing level of antimicrobial resistance affects both human and animal health, why it is necessary to identify ways to change our current use of antimicrobials. The veterinary herd health collaboration between veterinarians and dairy farmers provides a useful setting for changing antimicrobial use in livestock. However, farmers and veterinarians work in a complex agricultural setting influenced by socio-economic factors, which complicates their choices regarding antimicrobial usage. It is therefore necessary to be aware of the range of potential influencing factors and to integrate this knowledge in the relevant local settings. This manuscript presents a literature review of relevant factors relating to antimicrobial use within the veterinary herd health consultancy setting, including knowledge gaps of relevance for changing the use of antimicrobials. An enriched version of the framework of the Theory of Planned Behaviour was used to organise the literature review. We identified diverging attitudes on correct treatment practices and perceptions of antimicrobial resistance among veterinarians and farmers, influenced by individual risk perception as well as social norms. Furthermore, disagreements in terms of goal setting and in the frequency of herd visits in relation to herd health consultancy can negatively influence the collaboration and the intention to change antimicrobial use. Farmers and veterinarians emphasise the importance of legislation and the role of the dairy industry in changing antimicrobial use, but the relevance of specific factors depends on the country-specific context. Overall, farmers and veterinarians must communicate better to understand each other's perspectives and establish common goals within the collaboration if they are to work efficiently to reduce antimicrobial use. Farmers and veterinarians both requested changes in individual behaviour; however, they also called for national and structural solutions in terms of balanced legislation and the availability of better diagnostics to facilitate a change in antimicrobial use practices. These various paths to achieving the desired changes in antimicrobial use illustrate the need to bridge methodological research approaches of veterinary science and social sciences for a better understanding of our potential to change antimicrobial use within the dairy farm animal sector.

KW - antimicrobial resistance

KW - antimicrobial use

KW - dairy cattle

KW - decision-making

KW - farmers

KW - social factors

KW - veterinarians

KW - veterinary herd health consultancy

U2 - 10.3389/fvets.2020.547975

DO - 10.3389/fvets.2020.547975

M3 - Review

C2 - 33604361

AN - SCOPUS:85100901148

VL - 7

JO - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

JF - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

SN - 2297-1769

M1 - 547975

ER -

ID: 257875249