Antibiotic therapy in dogs and cats in general practise in the United Kingdom before referral

R. E. del Solar Bravo,M. J. Sharman,J. Raj, C. Scudder

JOURNAL OF SMALL ANIMAL PRACTICE(2023)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Objectives To describe antibiotic prescription by veterinarians in general practises in the United Kingdom before referral and analyse if UK antibiotic stewardship guidelines were followed.Materials and Methods The clinical records from dogs and cats referred to the Internal Medicine and Oncology departments of two referral hospitals were retrospectively reviewed.Results There were 917 cases included, of which 486 (53.0%) had been prescribed antibiotics for the presentation they were subsequently referred for. Bacterial culture or cytology to guide antibiotic prescription had been performed in 43 of 486 (8.8%) and nine of 486 cases (1.8%) respectively. In four cases, both cytology and culture were performed. For those animals who had received antibiotics, 344 of 486 (70.8%) prescriptions did not comply with UK antibiotic stewardship guidelines. Following investigations at a referral centre, a bacterial aetiology was found or suspected in 17.9% of the cases that received antibiotics.Clinical Significance Use of diagnostics, including culture and cytology, to prove or determine the likelihood of a bacterial aetiology was infrequently performed before referral and may have contributed to overprescription of antibiotics. Encouraging veterinarians to undertake appropriate diagnostics, in combination with education around compliance with antibiotic stewardship guidelines, might reduce antibiotic prescription.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要