Abstract

Aim:The current study aimed to assess the knowledge, attitude, and practices pertaining to antibiotic usage among the field veterinarians who serve as nodal officers playing a crucial role in disseminating knowledge to the farmers regarding livestock management practices in India.Materials and Methods:A pilot study was conducted in which 106 of the 173 field veterinarians of Haryana, India, agreed to contribute through their valuable participation in the study. The collected data were critically analyzed by simple descriptive statistics, and the responses were ranked using Garrett’s ranking method.Results:Our study found that most of the clinicians were aware of the fundamental clinical aspects of antibiotic resistance (AR), i.e., the general causes and transmission of resistance, response during treatment failure, and safe disposal of hospital waste. Further, implementation of “antibiotic stewardship” (rational/responsible use of antibiotics) and interruption of AR transmission by means of cross-kingdom pathogens are two ways to restrict the spread of resistant pathogens which were not in the clinical purview of majority of the clinicians. This highlights a lack of awareness and scope of improving clinician’s knowledge pertaining to AR. Moreover, we got to know the methodology adopted by farmers for disposal of infected milk from diseased udders as well as their attitude toward diseased and unproductive animals.Conclusion:This study provides snippets of the current animal husbandry practices prevalent at the field level which would assist to plug in the gaps of knowledge regarding AR among the veterinarians as well as the general public and serve to reduce its deleterious impacts in Indian animal farming as well as in the world through the concept of “One World, One Health.”

Highlights

  • Antibiotic resistance (AR) is a burning healthcare issue influencing both humans and domestic animals across the globe

  • The current study aimed to assess the knowledge, attitude, and practices pertaining to antibiotic usage among the field veterinarians who serve as nodal officers playing a crucial role in disseminating knowledge to the farmers regarding livestock management practices in India

  • Scanty reports are available on awareness studies related to KAP on AR in animal husbandry

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Summary

Introduction

Antibiotic resistance (AR) is a burning healthcare issue influencing both humans and domestic animals across the globe. In food animal production, treating individual animal is practically impossible, rather rendering treatment to the entire livestock by medicating them with low dose of antimicrobials through feed, water, or parenteral routes is a better alternative These mass medication procedures are collectively called. A questionnaire for this survey was developed by our research group based on prior literature review. It had 14 questions which were subdivided into six categories: Causes (2 items), transmission (2 items), diagnostics (1 item), treatment failure (2 items), waste disposal (2 items), and control strategies (5 items) related to AR with special reference to mastitis. Details of the questions and their corresponding responses are provided in Tables-1 and 2

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