Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Standard

Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings. / Singer, R.S.; Finch, R.; Wegener, Henrik Caspar; Bywater, R.; Walters, J.; Lipsitch, M.

I: Lancet Infectious Diseases, Bind 3, Nr. 1, 2003, s. 47-51.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Singer, RS, Finch, R, Wegener, HC, Bywater, R, Walters, J & Lipsitch, M 2003, 'Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings', Lancet Infectious Diseases, bind 3, nr. 1, s. 47-51.

APA

Singer, R. S., Finch, R., Wegener, H. C., Bywater, R., Walters, J., & Lipsitch, M. (2003). Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings. Lancet Infectious Diseases, 3(1), 47-51.

Vancouver

Singer RS, Finch R, Wegener HC, Bywater R, Walters J, Lipsitch M. Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings. Lancet Infectious Diseases. 2003;3(1):47-51.

Author

Singer, R.S. ; Finch, R. ; Wegener, Henrik Caspar ; Bywater, R. ; Walters, J. ; Lipsitch, M. / Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings. I: Lancet Infectious Diseases. 2003 ; Bind 3, Nr. 1. s. 47-51.

Bibtex

@article{344ffc4e4e2648cf8d547b57da56a8ae,
title = "Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings",
abstract = "Antibiotic-resistant bacteria were first identified in the 1940s, but while new antibiotics were being discovered at a steady rate, the consequences of this phenomenon were slow to be appreciated. Today, the excessive use of antibiotics compounded by the paucity of new agents on the market has meant the problem of antibiotic resistance is fast escalating into a global health crisis. There is no doubt that misuse of these drugs in human beings has contributed to the increasing rates of resistance, but recently the use of antibiotics in food animals and its consequent effect on resistance levels in people has also come under scrutiny. Antimicrobials are used therapeutically and prophylactically in animals. More controversially, antimicrobials are also used as growth promoters to improve the ability of the animal to convert feed into body mass. Some argue that the impact of use of antibiotics in animals-whether therapeutic or as growth promoters-pales by comparison with human use, and that efforts should be concentrated on the misuse of antibiotics in people. Others warn of the dangers of unregulated and unnecessary use of antibiotics, especially growth promoters in animal husbandry. There is a growing concern over the transmission of resistant bacteria via the food chain. Many questions will be difficult to resolve, such as how do you distinguish the fraction of resistance in human beings that originated from animals? If we wait to see evidence that a significant amount of antibiotic resistance really does come through the food chain, will it be too late for action? In this forum, we present different perspectives from both human and animal medicine, to better understand the complexity of the problem of antibiotic resistance and examine the challenges that lie ahead.",
author = "R.S. Singer and R. Finch and Wegener, {Henrik Caspar} and R. Bywater and J. Walters and M. Lipsitch",
year = "2003",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "47--51",
journal = "The Lancet Infectious Diseases",
issn = "1473-3099",
publisher = "TheLancet Publishing Group",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Antibiotic resistance - the interplay between antibiotic use in animals and human beings

AU - Singer, R.S.

AU - Finch, R.

AU - Wegener, Henrik Caspar

AU - Bywater, R.

AU - Walters, J.

AU - Lipsitch, M.

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - Antibiotic-resistant bacteria were first identified in the 1940s, but while new antibiotics were being discovered at a steady rate, the consequences of this phenomenon were slow to be appreciated. Today, the excessive use of antibiotics compounded by the paucity of new agents on the market has meant the problem of antibiotic resistance is fast escalating into a global health crisis. There is no doubt that misuse of these drugs in human beings has contributed to the increasing rates of resistance, but recently the use of antibiotics in food animals and its consequent effect on resistance levels in people has also come under scrutiny. Antimicrobials are used therapeutically and prophylactically in animals. More controversially, antimicrobials are also used as growth promoters to improve the ability of the animal to convert feed into body mass. Some argue that the impact of use of antibiotics in animals-whether therapeutic or as growth promoters-pales by comparison with human use, and that efforts should be concentrated on the misuse of antibiotics in people. Others warn of the dangers of unregulated and unnecessary use of antibiotics, especially growth promoters in animal husbandry. There is a growing concern over the transmission of resistant bacteria via the food chain. Many questions will be difficult to resolve, such as how do you distinguish the fraction of resistance in human beings that originated from animals? If we wait to see evidence that a significant amount of antibiotic resistance really does come through the food chain, will it be too late for action? In this forum, we present different perspectives from both human and animal medicine, to better understand the complexity of the problem of antibiotic resistance and examine the challenges that lie ahead.

AB - Antibiotic-resistant bacteria were first identified in the 1940s, but while new antibiotics were being discovered at a steady rate, the consequences of this phenomenon were slow to be appreciated. Today, the excessive use of antibiotics compounded by the paucity of new agents on the market has meant the problem of antibiotic resistance is fast escalating into a global health crisis. There is no doubt that misuse of these drugs in human beings has contributed to the increasing rates of resistance, but recently the use of antibiotics in food animals and its consequent effect on resistance levels in people has also come under scrutiny. Antimicrobials are used therapeutically and prophylactically in animals. More controversially, antimicrobials are also used as growth promoters to improve the ability of the animal to convert feed into body mass. Some argue that the impact of use of antibiotics in animals-whether therapeutic or as growth promoters-pales by comparison with human use, and that efforts should be concentrated on the misuse of antibiotics in people. Others warn of the dangers of unregulated and unnecessary use of antibiotics, especially growth promoters in animal husbandry. There is a growing concern over the transmission of resistant bacteria via the food chain. Many questions will be difficult to resolve, such as how do you distinguish the fraction of resistance in human beings that originated from animals? If we wait to see evidence that a significant amount of antibiotic resistance really does come through the food chain, will it be too late for action? In this forum, we present different perspectives from both human and animal medicine, to better understand the complexity of the problem of antibiotic resistance and examine the challenges that lie ahead.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 47

EP - 51

JO - The Lancet Infectious Diseases

JF - The Lancet Infectious Diseases

SN - 1473-3099

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 172806946