Abstract

Due to the increased demand of animal protein in developing countries, intensive farming is instigated, which results in antibiotic residues in animal-derived products, and eventually, antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic resistance is of great public health concern because the antibiotic-resistant bacteria associated with the animals may be pathogenic to humans, easily transmitted to humans via food chains, and widely disseminated in the environment via animal wastes. These may cause complicated, untreatable, and prolonged infections in humans, leading to higher healthcare cost and sometimes death. In the said countries, antibiotic resistance is so complex and difficult, due to irrational use of antibiotics both in the clinical and agriculture settings, low socioeconomic status, poor sanitation and hygienic status, as well as that zoonotic bacterial pathogens are not regularly cultured, and their resistance to commonly used antibiotics are scarcely investigated (poor surveillance systems). The challenges that follow are of local, national, regional, and international dimensions, as there are no geographic boundaries to impede the spread of antibiotic resistance. In addition, the information assembled in this study through a thorough review of published findings, emphasized the presence of antibiotics in animal-derived products and the phenomenon of multidrug resistance in environmental samples. This therefore calls for strengthening of regulations that direct antibiotic manufacture, distribution, dispensing, and prescription, hence fostering antibiotic stewardship. Joint collaboration across the world with international bodies is needed to assist the developing countries to implement good surveillance of antibiotic use and antibiotic resistance.

Keywords

Antibiotic resistanceAntibioticsPublic healthSanitationMedicineAgricultureEnvironmental healthIntensive care medicineBiotechnologyBiologyMicrobiologyEcology

MeSH Terms

Animal HusbandryAnimalsAnti-Bacterial AgentsBacteriaDrug ResistanceBacterialHumansSocioeconomic Factors

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
23
Issue
4
Pages
795-795
Citations
1602
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1602
OpenAlex
33
Influential
1330
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Cite This

Christy E. Manyi-Loh, Sampson Mamphweli, Edson L. Meyer et al. (2018). Antibiotic Use in Agriculture and Its Consequential Resistance in Environmental Sources: Potential Public Health Implications. Molecules , 23 (4) , 795-795. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules23040795

Identifiers

DOI
10.3390/molecules23040795
PMID
29601469
PMCID
PMC6017557

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%