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Short Communications

Use of antimicrobials for food animals in New Zealand: updated estimates to identify a baseline to measure targeted reductions

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, , , & ORCID Icon
Pages 180-185 | Received 05 Mar 2020, Accepted 31 Jan 2021, Published online: 15 Mar 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Aim

To describe the use of antimicrobial drugs for food animals in New Zealand, based on sales data reported to government for 2005–2018, to provide a baseline to determine the success of measures to reduce antimicrobial use for food animals and to compare usage to selected European countries.

Methods

Data were sourced from official government and industry reports to update previous estimates of use (as amount sold) of antimicrobial products applied to animals in New Zealand. The data included antimicrobial sales and animal populations, weighted where appropriate by breed and age class. Antimicrobial use was estimated based on the amount of active ingredient sold, per kg of animal biomass standardised to the probable weight at time of treatment or lifetime average but not slaughter weight (population correction unit; PCU). New Zealand data for 2017 and 2018 were adjusted to account only for antimicrobials used for farm animals by discounting horticulture use, companion animal use and export.

Results

Between 2014 and 2018 the estimated usage of antimicrobials in animals flattened to a 5-year rolling average of 10.40 mg/PCU. New data on use for companion animals and on exports of zinc bacitracin and tylosin, included previously in the gross New Zealand values, allow a more refined estimate of use of antimicrobials in food animals of 10.21 mg/PCU in 2018, the third lowest rate of use for countries reporting by the same methodology. The intensive industries of pigs and poultry combined use more than 500 mg/PCU whereas the extensive red meat and dairy industries use an estimated 6.25 mg/PCU. New Zealand uses proportionally more cephalosporins and macrolides, two of the critically important antimicrobial groups, when compared with European countries, but less quinolones. The most obvious difference is the extensive use of zinc bacitracin and tylosin fed to pigs and poultry in New Zealand but not in the European Union.

Conclusions

Use of antimicrobials in food animals has stabilised to a rate of approximately 10.2 mg/PCU. This baseline should be used by the animal health industry to measure future success in its efforts to reduce and make more refined use of antimicrobial drugs as New Zealand works to deliver the government’s Antimicrobial Resistance Action Plan. High rates of use of zinc bacitracin and some critically important macrolides represent clear targets in attempts to reduce usage.

Acknowledgements

Support from the NZVA is gratefully acknowledged. All authors are members of the NZVA Antimicrobial Resistance Committee. The New Zealand MPI Agricultural Chemical and Veterinary Medicines Group kindly provided advance data from their impending antimicrobials sales report for 2018. E. Catherwood (Agri Health) kindly provided key information on the proportion of zinc bacitracin and tylosin recorded as New Zealand sales but actually exported, and on the registration of an anti-coccidial vaccine for poultry.

Notes

1 E Catherwood, Managing Director, Agrihealth, Auckland, NZ.

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