| Literature DB >> 18410674 |
Katariina Thomson1, Merja Rantala, Maria Hautala, Satu Pyörälä, Liisa Kaartinen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Indication-based data on the use of antimicrobials in animals were collected using a prospective cross-sectional survey, similarly as for surveys carried out in human medicine, but adapting the questionnaire to include veterinary-specific issues. The participating veterinarians were randomly selected from a sample population of practising veterinarians. The sampling was stratified to take into account the proportions of different types of veterinary practice in the country. All patients consulting the veterinary practice during a 1-week period were included in the study and veterinarians returned a completed questionnaire for each patient receiving antimicrobial treatment. As cattle received most of the treatments, results from the survey are given using cattle as an example species.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18410674 PMCID: PMC2375862 DOI: 10.1186/1746-6148-4-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Information collected in the survey on antimicrobial use and variables entered into the database
| 1. Animal species | Coded | Dog, cat, horse, cattle, pig, fur animals, fish, other |
| 2. Type of visit | Coded | Normal daytime visit, on-call visit or prescription by phone |
| 3. Main diagnosis | Coded | 18 pre-coded alternatives and possibility to give own diagnosis if something else |
| 4. Duration of clinical signs | Coded | 0–3, 4–7, 8–14 days or longer |
| 5. Clinical examination or diagnostic tests carried out | Coded | 8 pre-coded alternatives and possibility to describe other tests or procedures |
| 6. Antimicrobial drug administered by veterinarian | Text | Product name and strength; amount given |
| 7. Antimicrobial drug given to the owner to continue the treatment (per oral or injectable) | Text | Product name and strength; duration of treatment |
| 8. Antimicrobial drug given to the owner to continue the treatment (local treatment, including intramammaries) | Text | Product name and strength; duration of treatment |
| 9. Was the choice of product used affected by allergy, other disease, owner's wishes, recurrent or chronic infection or something else? | Coded | |
| 10. Was this the first visit or a follow-up visit? | Coded |
Background information on the veterinary practitioners
| Community/county veterinarian in countryside | 233 (27%) | 176 (76%) | 73 (41%) | 27.9 |
| Community/county veterinarian working in city | 119 (14%) | 91 (76%) | 35 (38%) | 13.4 |
| Community/county head of health services | 13 (2%) | 13 (100%) | 9 (69%) | 3.4 |
| Government or Helsinki University | 80 (9%) | 42 (53%) | 19 (45%) | 7.3 |
| Private practitioner | 180 (21%) | 132 (73%) | 48 (36%) | 18.3 |
| Veterinarians with non-permanent positions | 141 (16%) | 136 (96%) | 47 (35%) | 17.9 |
| Student with right to practice the profession | 92 (11%) | 91 (99%) | 31 (34%) | 11.8 |
Figure 1Distribution of antimicrobial substances used for different animal species during the one-week study period. 'Others' includes cats, fur animals, rabbits, small rodents and reptiles.
Figure 2Methods applied by veterinarians to diagnose acute bovine mastitis. C = clinical signs, B = bacteriological culture and sensitivity testing, CMT = California Mastitis Test, not recorded = no diagnostics were used or none recorded.