Description
Consumption of antibiotics in food animals is increasing worldwide and is approaching, if not already surpassing, the volume consumed by humans. It is often suggested that reducing the volume of antibiotics consumed by food animals could have public health benefits. Although this notion is widely regarded as intuitively obvious there is a lack of robust, quantitative evidence to either support or contradict the suggestion. As a first step towards addressing this knowledge gap, we develop a simple mathematical model for exploring the generic relationship between antibiotic consumption by food animals and levels of resistant bacterial infections in humans. We investigate the impact of restricting antibiotic consumption by animals and identify which model parameters most strongly determine that impact. Our results suggest that, for a wide range of scenarios, curtailing the volume of antibiotics consumed by food animals has, as a stand-alone measure, little impact on the level of resistance in humans. We also find that reducing the rate of transmission of resistance from animals to humans may be more effective than an equivalent reduction in the consumption of antibiotics in food animals. Moreover, the response to any intervention is strongly determined by the rate of transmission from humans to animals, an aspect which is rarely considered.
Data Citation
van Bunnik, Bram A.D.; Woolhouse, Mark E.J. (2017), Data from: Modelling the impact of curtailing antibiotic usage in food animals on antibiotic resistance in humans, Dryad, Dataset, https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.1g98m
| Date made available | 7 Mar 2017 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Dryad |
Research output
- 1 Article
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Modelling the impact of curtailing antibiotic usage in food animals on antibiotic resistance in humans
van Bunnik, B. A. D. & Woolhouse, M. E. J., 5 Apr 2017, (E-pub ahead of print) In: Royal Society Open Science. 4, 4, p. 161067Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile
Projects
- 1 Finished
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COMPARE: COllaborative Management Platform for detection and Analyses of (Re-)emerging and foodborne outbreaks in Europe
Woolhouse, M. (Principal Investigator)
1/12/14 → 30/11/19
Project: Research
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