Abstract

SummaryAntimicrobial drug resistance is a critical problem in human and veterinary medicine. Antimicrobial drug use and particularly overuse or misuse drive resistance. Surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis (SAP) is one area where misuse and overuse (particularly prolonged SAP) is documented to be at a high level. Infection‐related complications can be devastating to the patient, harm the client/patient–surgeon relationship and damage the reputation of the surgeon. Consequently, surgeons tend to be reluctant to change their antimicrobial prescribing behaviour. There is a plethora of data from human surgery and emerging data from veterinary surgery describing appropriate SAP and supporting the use of shorter duration of SAP. Antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) have been developed and evaluated in human hospitals and this type of collaborative approach would likely have benefit in veterinary hospitals.

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