Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies. / Sandberg, Marianne; Hesp, Ayla; Aenishaenslin, Cécile; Bordier, Marion; Bennani, Houda; Bergwerff, Ursula; Chantziaras, Ilias; De Meneghi, Daniele; Ellis-Iversen, Johanne; Filippizi, Maria Eleni; Mintiens, Koen; Nielsen, Liza R.; Norström, Madelaine; Tomassone, Laura; van Schaik, Gerdien; Alban, Lis.

In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science, Vol. 8, 620998, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sandberg, M, Hesp, A, Aenishaenslin, C, Bordier, M, Bennani, H, Bergwerff, U, Chantziaras, I, De Meneghi, D, Ellis-Iversen, J, Filippizi, ME, Mintiens, K, Nielsen, LR, Norström, M, Tomassone, L, van Schaik, G & Alban, L 2021, 'Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies', Frontiers in Veterinary Science, vol. 8, 620998. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.620998

APA

Sandberg, M., Hesp, A., Aenishaenslin, C., Bordier, M., Bennani, H., Bergwerff, U., Chantziaras, I., De Meneghi, D., Ellis-Iversen, J., Filippizi, M. E., Mintiens, K., Nielsen, L. R., Norström, M., Tomassone, L., van Schaik, G., & Alban, L. (2021). Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 8, [620998]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.620998

Vancouver

Sandberg M, Hesp A, Aenishaenslin C, Bordier M, Bennani H, Bergwerff U et al. Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies. Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2021;8. 620998. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.620998

Author

Sandberg, Marianne ; Hesp, Ayla ; Aenishaenslin, Cécile ; Bordier, Marion ; Bennani, Houda ; Bergwerff, Ursula ; Chantziaras, Ilias ; De Meneghi, Daniele ; Ellis-Iversen, Johanne ; Filippizi, Maria Eleni ; Mintiens, Koen ; Nielsen, Liza R. ; Norström, Madelaine ; Tomassone, Laura ; van Schaik, Gerdien ; Alban, Lis. / Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies. In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2021 ; Vol. 8.

Bibtex

@article{500c7dd67fe0458aa4c569ebc7cce91d,
title = "Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies",
abstract = "Regular evaluation of integrated surveillance for antimicrobial use (AMU) and resistance (AMR) in animals, humans, and the environment is needed to ensure system effectiveness, but the question is how. In this study, six different evaluation tools were assessed after being applied to AMU and AMR surveillance in eight countries: (1) ATLASS: the Assessment Tool for Laboratories and AMR Surveillance Systems developed by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, (2) ECoSur: Evaluation of Collaboration for Surveillance tool, (3) ISSEP: Integrated Surveillance System Evaluation Project, (4) NEOH: developed by the EU COST Action “Network for Evaluation of One Health,” (5) PMP-AMR: The Progressive Management Pathway tool on AMR developed by the FAO, and (6) SURVTOOLS: developed in the FP7-EU project “RISKSUR.” Each tool was scored using (i) 11 pre-defined functional aspects (e.g., workability concerning the need for data, time, and people); (ii) a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT)-like approach of user experiences (e.g., things that I liked or that the tool covered well); and (iii) eight predefined content themes related to scope (e.g., development purpose and collaboration). PMP-AMR, ATLASS, ECoSur, and NEOH are evaluation tools that provide a scoring system to obtain semi-quantitative results, whereas ISSEP and SURVTOOLS will result in a plan for how to conduct evaluation(s). ISSEP, ECoSur, NEOH, and SURVTOOLS allow for in-depth analyses and therefore require more complex data, information, and specific training of evaluator(s). PMP-AMR, ATLASS, and ISSEP were developed specifically for AMR-related activities—only ISSEP included production of a direct measure for “integration” and “impact on decision making.” NEOH and ISSEP were perceived as the best tools for evaluation of One Health (OH) aspects, and ECoSur as best for evaluation of the quality of collaboration. PMP-AMR and ATLASS seemed to be the most user-friendly tools, particularly designed for risk managers. ATLASS was the only tool focusing specifically on laboratory activities. Our experience is that adequate resources are needed to perform evaluation(s). In most cases, evaluation would require involvement of several assessors and/or stakeholders, taking from weeks to months to complete. This study can help direct future evaluators of integrated AMU and AMR surveillance toward the most adequate tool for their specific evaluation purpose.",
keywords = "AMR, evaluation, integrated surveillance, one health, tools",
author = "Marianne Sandberg and Ayla Hesp and C{\'e}cile Aenishaenslin and Marion Bordier and Houda Bennani and Ursula Bergwerff and Ilias Chantziaras and {De Meneghi}, Daniele and Johanne Ellis-Iversen and Filippizi, {Maria Eleni} and Koen Mintiens and Nielsen, {Liza R.} and Madelaine Norstr{\"o}m and Laura Tomassone and {van Schaik}, Gerdien and Lis Alban",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3389/fvets.2021.620998",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Frontiers in Veterinary Science",
issn = "2297-1769",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Assessment of Evaluation Tools for Integrated Surveillance of Antimicrobial Use and Resistance Based on Selected Case Studies

AU - Sandberg, Marianne

AU - Hesp, Ayla

AU - Aenishaenslin, Cécile

AU - Bordier, Marion

AU - Bennani, Houda

AU - Bergwerff, Ursula

AU - Chantziaras, Ilias

AU - De Meneghi, Daniele

AU - Ellis-Iversen, Johanne

AU - Filippizi, Maria Eleni

AU - Mintiens, Koen

AU - Nielsen, Liza R.

AU - Norström, Madelaine

AU - Tomassone, Laura

AU - van Schaik, Gerdien

AU - Alban, Lis

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Regular evaluation of integrated surveillance for antimicrobial use (AMU) and resistance (AMR) in animals, humans, and the environment is needed to ensure system effectiveness, but the question is how. In this study, six different evaluation tools were assessed after being applied to AMU and AMR surveillance in eight countries: (1) ATLASS: the Assessment Tool for Laboratories and AMR Surveillance Systems developed by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, (2) ECoSur: Evaluation of Collaboration for Surveillance tool, (3) ISSEP: Integrated Surveillance System Evaluation Project, (4) NEOH: developed by the EU COST Action “Network for Evaluation of One Health,” (5) PMP-AMR: The Progressive Management Pathway tool on AMR developed by the FAO, and (6) SURVTOOLS: developed in the FP7-EU project “RISKSUR.” Each tool was scored using (i) 11 pre-defined functional aspects (e.g., workability concerning the need for data, time, and people); (ii) a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT)-like approach of user experiences (e.g., things that I liked or that the tool covered well); and (iii) eight predefined content themes related to scope (e.g., development purpose and collaboration). PMP-AMR, ATLASS, ECoSur, and NEOH are evaluation tools that provide a scoring system to obtain semi-quantitative results, whereas ISSEP and SURVTOOLS will result in a plan for how to conduct evaluation(s). ISSEP, ECoSur, NEOH, and SURVTOOLS allow for in-depth analyses and therefore require more complex data, information, and specific training of evaluator(s). PMP-AMR, ATLASS, and ISSEP were developed specifically for AMR-related activities—only ISSEP included production of a direct measure for “integration” and “impact on decision making.” NEOH and ISSEP were perceived as the best tools for evaluation of One Health (OH) aspects, and ECoSur as best for evaluation of the quality of collaboration. PMP-AMR and ATLASS seemed to be the most user-friendly tools, particularly designed for risk managers. ATLASS was the only tool focusing specifically on laboratory activities. Our experience is that adequate resources are needed to perform evaluation(s). In most cases, evaluation would require involvement of several assessors and/or stakeholders, taking from weeks to months to complete. This study can help direct future evaluators of integrated AMU and AMR surveillance toward the most adequate tool for their specific evaluation purpose.

AB - Regular evaluation of integrated surveillance for antimicrobial use (AMU) and resistance (AMR) in animals, humans, and the environment is needed to ensure system effectiveness, but the question is how. In this study, six different evaluation tools were assessed after being applied to AMU and AMR surveillance in eight countries: (1) ATLASS: the Assessment Tool for Laboratories and AMR Surveillance Systems developed by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, (2) ECoSur: Evaluation of Collaboration for Surveillance tool, (3) ISSEP: Integrated Surveillance System Evaluation Project, (4) NEOH: developed by the EU COST Action “Network for Evaluation of One Health,” (5) PMP-AMR: The Progressive Management Pathway tool on AMR developed by the FAO, and (6) SURVTOOLS: developed in the FP7-EU project “RISKSUR.” Each tool was scored using (i) 11 pre-defined functional aspects (e.g., workability concerning the need for data, time, and people); (ii) a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT)-like approach of user experiences (e.g., things that I liked or that the tool covered well); and (iii) eight predefined content themes related to scope (e.g., development purpose and collaboration). PMP-AMR, ATLASS, ECoSur, and NEOH are evaluation tools that provide a scoring system to obtain semi-quantitative results, whereas ISSEP and SURVTOOLS will result in a plan for how to conduct evaluation(s). ISSEP, ECoSur, NEOH, and SURVTOOLS allow for in-depth analyses and therefore require more complex data, information, and specific training of evaluator(s). PMP-AMR, ATLASS, and ISSEP were developed specifically for AMR-related activities—only ISSEP included production of a direct measure for “integration” and “impact on decision making.” NEOH and ISSEP were perceived as the best tools for evaluation of One Health (OH) aspects, and ECoSur as best for evaluation of the quality of collaboration. PMP-AMR and ATLASS seemed to be the most user-friendly tools, particularly designed for risk managers. ATLASS was the only tool focusing specifically on laboratory activities. Our experience is that adequate resources are needed to perform evaluation(s). In most cases, evaluation would require involvement of several assessors and/or stakeholders, taking from weeks to months to complete. This study can help direct future evaluators of integrated AMU and AMR surveillance toward the most adequate tool for their specific evaluation purpose.

KW - AMR

KW - evaluation

KW - integrated surveillance

KW - one health

KW - tools

U2 - 10.3389/fvets.2021.620998

DO - 10.3389/fvets.2021.620998

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34307513

AN - SCOPUS:85111309411

VL - 8

JO - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

JF - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

SN - 2297-1769

M1 - 620998

ER -

ID: 275768854