Title (en)
National Monitoring of Veterinary-Dispensed Antimicrobials for Use on Pig Farms in Austria: 2015–2020
Language
English
Description (en)
Antimicrobial use in livestock production systems is increasingly scrutinised by consumers, stakeholders, and the veterinary profession. In Austria, veterinarians dispensing antimicrobials for use in food-producing animals have been required to report these drugs since 2015. Here, we describe the national monitoring systems and the results obtained for Austrian pig production over a six-year period. Antimicrobial dispensing is described using the mass-based metric, milligrams per population correction unit (mg/PCU) and the dose-based metric, Defined Daily Dose (DDDvet) per year and divided into the European Medicines Agency's prudent use categories. Pig production was divided into breeding units, fattening farms, farrow-to-finish farms, and piglet-rearing systems. Over all six years and all pig production systems, the mean amount of antimicrobials dispensed was 71.6 mg/PCU or 2.2 DDDvet per year. Piglet-rearing systems were found to have the highest levels of antimicrobial dispensing in DDDvet, as well as the largest proportion of Category B antimicrobials, including polymyxins. Although progress has been made in promoting a more prudent use of antimicrobials in veterinary medicine in Austria, further steps need to be taken to proactively improve animal health and prevent disease to reduce the need for antimicrobials, particularly those critically important for human medicine, in the future.
Keywords (en)
Resistance; Colistin
DOI
10.3390/antibiotics11020216
Author of the digital object
Clair L. Firth  (University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna)
Reinhard Fuchs  (Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety)
Klemens Fuchs  (Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety)
Format
application/pdf
Size
5.2 MB
Licence Selected
Type of publication
Article
Name of Publication (en)
Antibiotics
Pages or Volume
14
Volume
11
Number
2
Publisher
MDPI
Publication Date
2022