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Unravelling the socioeconomic factors linked to antibiotic use in poultry farms: a qualitative study in the Analamanga region, Madagascar

Molia Sophie, Tsimok'Haja Ramahatafandry Ilo, Rakotoharinome Vincent Michel, Hobeika Alexandre, Figuié Muriel, Kassie Daouda. 2024. Unravelling the socioeconomic factors linked to antibiotic use in poultry farms: a qualitative study in the Analamanga region, Madagascar. In : Tropical veterinary medicine in challenging times. Book of abstracts. AITVM, STVM, CIRAD. Montpellier : AITVM, Résumé, p. 79. Joint AITVM–STVM International Conference. 3, Montpellier, France, 21 Mai 2024/24 Mai 2024.

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Url - autre : https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11624809

Résumé : Introduction: Antimicrobial resistance is a global public health threat mainly caused by the massive use and misuse of antimicrobials. Addressing the animal health part of this issue is challenging in low-and-middle-income countries where information is scarce regarding access and use of veterinary drugs. Our objective was therefore to investigate the socio-economic factors of antibiotic use in poultry farms of Madagascar. Methods: We conducted semi-structured interviews with 79 poultry farmers in the Analamanga region in April 2023. Thematic analysis was used to extract the perceptions and practices related to veterinary care, the supply and uses of veterinary medicines. Results & Discussion: The majority of poultry farmers had received little livestock training and raised poultry as a side job. Most farmers had very basic knowledge of diseases and treatments. They relied on varied sources of advice for how to take care of poultry: feed/chicks/drug suppliers, technicians, veterinarians, other farmers and family members in decreasing order. Access to veterinary drugs was easy, without prior clinical examination and without prescriptions. Vitamins and antibiotics were the most commonly used medication. Many constraints (food price, quality of inputs, poor selling conditions) limited the financial capacity of farmers to invest in good practices (hygiene, disinfection, vaccination…). Farmers tended to agree with the idea of using fewer antibiotics in the future but this was mainly driven by the prospect of reducing costs than of preserving public health. In conclusion, good antibiotic use should be promoted through feed/chicks/drug suppliers to maximize efficiency in contexts of poor farmers' professionalization.

Mots-clés libres : Socioeconomic factors, Antibiotic resistance, Qualitative study, Madagascar

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Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/610180/)

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