Antimicrobial resistance, a silent pandemic.

Authors

  • Silvia Simon Universidad de la República .Doctor en Ciencias Veterinarias. Hospital Quirúrgico Veterinario. Servicio de Veterinaria y Remonta. Canelones image/svg+xml https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2048-3268
  • Martín Labandera Universidad de la República .Doctor en Ciencias Veterinarias. Hospital Quirúrgico Veterinario. Servicio de Veterinaria y Remonta. Canelones image/svg+xml

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35954/SM2023.42.1.5.e401

Keywords:

Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Drug Resistance, Microbial.

Abstract

Introduction: Antimicrobial resistance has been a growing problem at a global level, affecting not only the health of people, animals and the environment in general, but it has also generated impacts of a productive and commercial nature. One of the strategies to address this problem is the one-health approach. This approach emphasizes multidisciplinary participation to combat antimicrobial resistance; and thus, each profession or work activity generates innate responsibilities for the veterinary profession. Veterinarians have a fundamental role for this purpose, since they are the ones who integrate the applicability of promotion and prevention strategies at the agricultural level, and of consolidation and interlocution between the different components of the approach (animal, human, environment) from the field of veterinary public health. Materials and Method: a literature search was carried out in different databases, with the aim of carrying out an updated review on antimicrobial resistance. Results: one of the main strategies should be to promote an adequate use and under prescription of antimicrobials in animal production. Promote good hygiene, biosecurity and vaccination practices, facilitating a correct diagnosis of infectious diseases in animals. Discussion: the adoption of international standards for the responsible use of antibiotics and the guidelines established by the World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, through Codex Alimentarius and the World Organization for Animal Health, are fundamental to face the challenge posed by the problem of antimicrobial resistance.

Received for review: September 2022.
Accepted for publication: February 2023.
Correspondence: Hospital Quirúrgico Veterinario. Servicio de Veterinaria y Remonta. Camino Carrasco Km.18.  Montevideo, Uruguay. Tel: (+598) 26014705/26011393.
Contact e-mail: svr@ejercito.mil.uy, vetsilviasimon@gmail.com

 

 

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Author Biographies

Silvia Simon, Universidad de la República .Doctor en Ciencias Veterinarias. Hospital Quirúrgico Veterinario. Servicio de Veterinaria y Remonta. Canelones

CONTRIBUTED TO THE MANUSCITE IN: Conception, design, data acquisition, data analysis, interpretation and discussion of results, drafting and critical revision, and approval of the final version.

Martín Labandera, Universidad de la República .Doctor en Ciencias Veterinarias. Hospital Quirúrgico Veterinario. Servicio de Veterinaria y Remonta. Canelones

CONTRIBUTED TO THE MANUSCITARY IN: Data acquisition, data analysis.

Published

2023-05-24 — Updated on 2023-05-24

How to Cite

1.
Simon S, Labandera M. Antimicrobial resistance, a silent pandemic. Salud Mil [Internet]. 2023 May 24 [cited 2026 Apr. 17];42(1):e401. Available from: https://revistasaludmilitar.uy/ojs/index.php/Rsm/article/view/394

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