
Research topics
- Emergency medicine
- Medicine
- Family medicine
- Internal medicine
- Pharmacology
Selected publications
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine · 2021 · 37 citations
- Medicine
- Emergency medicine
- Internal medicine
BACKGROUND: Combatting antimicrobial resistance requires a One Health approach to antimicrobial stewardship including antimicrobial drug (AMD) use evaluation. Current veterinary AMD prescribing data are limited. OBJECTIVES: To quantify companion animal AMD prescribing in primary care and specialty practice across 3 academic veterinary hospitals with particular focus on third-generation cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, and carbapenems. ANIMALS: Dogs and cats presented to 3 academic veterinary hospitals from 2012 to 2017. METHODS: In this retrospective study, AMD prescribing data from 2012 to 2017 were extracted from electronic medical records at each hospital and prescriptions classified by service type: primary care, specialty practice or Emergency/Critical Care (ECC). Hospital-level AMD prescribing data were summarized by species, service type, AMD class, and drug. Multivariable logistic full-factorial regression models were used to estimate hospital, year, species, and service-type effects on AMD prescribing. Estimated marginal means and confidence intervals were plotted over time. RESULTS: The probability of systemic AMD prescribing for any indication ranged between 0.15 and 0.28 and was higher for dogs than cats (P < .05) apart from 2017 at hospital 1. Animals presented to primary care were least likely to receive AMDs (dogs 0.03-0.15, cats 0.03-0.18). The most commonly prescribed AMD classes were aminopenicillins/β-lactamase inhibitors (0.02-0.15), first-generation cephalosporins (0.00-0.09), fluoroquinolones (0.00-0.04), nitroimidazoles (0.01-0.06), and tetracyclines (0.00-0.03). Among the highest priority classes, fluoroquinolones (dogs 0.00-0.09, cats 0.00-0.08) and third-generation cephalosporins (dogs 0.00-0.04, cats 0.00-0.05) were most frequently prescribed. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Antimicrobial drug prescribing frequencies were comparable to previous studies. Additional stewardship efforts might focus on fluoroquinolones and third-generation cephalosporins.
Frequent coauthors
- 39 shared
Rimi Chowdhury
Cornell University
- 24 shared
Tamer Uyar
New York State University College of Human Ecology
- 24 shared
Colleen R. Eade
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
- 22 shared
Lorin D. Warnick
New York State College of Veterinary Medicine
- 21 shared
Chien‐Che Hung
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- 19 shared
Casey L. Cazer
New York State College of Veterinary Medicine
- 18 shared
M. Mitsu Suyemoto
North Carolina State University
- 18 shared
Kevin J. Cummings
Cornell University
Education
- 1996
PhD, Molecular Biology and Microbiology
Case Western Reserve University
- 1985
DVM
Ohio State University
- 1981
BA
Hiram College
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