| Literature DB >> 30616648 |
John E Ekakoro1, Marc Caldwell2, Elizabeth B Strand1, Chika C Okafor3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In recent years, there has been an increased awareness of antimicrobial resistance in both animals and humans, which has triggered concerns over non-judicious antimicrobial use. In the United States, antimicrobial use in food-producing animals for growth promotion or improved feed efficiency is perceived as non-judicious. To facilitate judicious antimicrobial use, the United States Food and Drug Administration implemented the Veterinary Feed Directive, effective from January 1, 2017. Interventions, such as the VFD, designed to ensure the judicious use of antimicrobials among cattle producers may be more effective if the factors that inform and influence producer AMU practices are addressed. The specific objectives of this study were to determine the following among Tennessee beef cattle producers: (1) the most common drivers for using antimicrobials, (2) the perceived alternatives to antimicrobials, (3) the knowledge and perceptions regarding antimicrobial resistance, and (4) the preferred avenues for receiving information on prudent antimicrobial use. A total of 5 focus group meetings with beef producers were conducted in East, Middle, and West Tennessee. Each focus group was video recorded and thematic analysis was performed using NVivo.Entities:
Keywords: Antimicrobial resistance; Antimicrobial use; Focus group discussions; Qualitative study; Tennessee-beef cattle producers; Veterinary feed directive
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30616648 PMCID: PMC6323766 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-018-1731-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Focus group participant characteristics
| Focus group | Geographic region (location) | Number of participants ( | Herd size range | Gender of participants | Cattle operation type (number of participants) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Johnson City, East Tennessee | 9 | 40–80 | All male | Cow-calf operation ( |
| Cow-calf and backgrounding ( | |||||
| Stocker ( | |||||
| Backgrounding and finishing ( | |||||
| Cow-calf and stocker operation ( | |||||
| 2 | Dickson county, middle Tennessee | 9 | 40–135 | All male | Cow-calf producer ( |
| Cow-calf producer and commercial stocker ( | |||||
| Seed stock producer ( | |||||
| Stocker ( | |||||
| Brood cow producer ( | |||||
| Seed-stock and brood cow producer ( | |||||
| Seed-stock and replacement bull, heifers ( | |||||
| 3 | McNairy county, west Tennessee | 8 | 30–200 | All male | Black angus operation ( |
| Angus seed-stock operation ( | |||||
| Seed stock operation ( | |||||
| Cow-calf operation ( | |||||
| Cow-calf operation and angus seed stock ( | |||||
| 4 | Jefferson county, East Tennessee | 8 | 20–200 | All male | Cow-calf operation ( |
| Stocker ( | |||||
| Cow-calf and backgrounding operation ( | |||||
| 5 | Athens, McMinn county, East Tennessee | 5 | 30–225 | Male | Cow-calf ( |
| Cow-calf and backgrounding operation ( | |||||
| Brood cow and backgrounding operation ( | |||||
| Female | Cow-calf and backgrounding ( |
Fig. 1A thematic map showing drivers of antimicrobial use among beef producers in Tennessee, 2017