Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is influenced by antimicrobial use in human and animal health. This use exerts selection pressure on pathogen populations with the development of resistance and the exchange of resistance genes. While the exact scale of AMR in Vietnam remains uncertain, recent studies suggest that it is a major issue in both human and animal health. This study explored antimicrobial use behaviors in 36 pig farms in the Nam Dinh Province (North) and the Dong Nai Province (South) of Vietnam (with a median of 5.5 breeding sows and 41 fattening pigs). It also estimated the economic costs and benefits of use for the producer. Data were collected through a structured face-to-face interview with additional productivity data collected by farmers during a six-week period following the initial interview. Overall, antimicrobial use was high across the farms; however, in-feed antimicrobial use is likely to be under-reported due to misleading and imprecise labelling on premixed commercial feeds. An economic analysis found that the cost of antimicrobials was low relative to other farm inputs (~2% of total costs), and that farm profitability was precariously balanced, with high disease and poor prices leading to negative and low profits. Future policies for smallholder farms need to consider farm-level economics and livestock food supply issues when developing further antimicrobial use interventions in the region.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the greatest challenges to global health

  • All of the farms included in the study were farrow to finish farms which had either taken part, or agreed to take part, in a previous Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) study into Knowledge attitudes and Practices (KAP)

  • There are a large number of antimicrobials used in the livestock sector in Vietnam, and AMR

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Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the greatest challenges to global health. Health Organization (WHO) have expressed concerns that after 70 years of indiscriminate and overuse of antimicrobials that AMR “threatens the achievements of modern medicine” [1]. Antibiotics 2020, 9, 299 occurring phenomenon, its development is driven through the excessive and inappropriate use of antimicrobials in humans and animals [2,3]. Vietnam has been highlighted as a potential hotspot for the development of AMR due to its high burden of infectious disease, rapidly growing economy and the ease of access to antimicrobials [5]. Little is known of the burden of AMR on human health and food sustainability in Vietnam with evidence limited to small-scale studies

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