Antimicrobial use in sows in Finland and its association with herd characteristics
Kristina Ahlqvist, Camilla Munsterhjelm, Anna-Riia Holmström, Minna Kujala-Wirth, Vera Talvitie, Anna Valros, Mari Heinonen

TL;DR
This study examines antimicrobial use in Finnish sow herds and finds that large herds and those with higher biosecurity scores use more antibiotics, primarily for locomotory and udder issues.
Contribution
The study provides a detailed analysis of antimicrobial use patterns in Finnish sow herds and identifies farm-level risk factors associated with higher AMU.
Findings
Injectable penicillin was the most commonly used antimicrobial in Finnish sow herds.
AMU was higher in large herds, piglet producers, and herds with higher internal biosecurity scores.
Locomotory disorders were the most frequent reason for antimicrobial treatment in sows.
Abstract
Antimicrobial use (AMU) in food-producing animals affects development of antimicrobial resistance. Previous studies have shown that AMU for pigs varies considerably between herds and countries. Finland has relatively low AMU in pigs, although pigs are the main species treated with antimicrobials. In Finland, the use of medicines for pigs is recorded in the national web-based herd health and welfare register Sikava. We aimed to qualitatively and quantitatively describe AMU in Finnish sows using anonymous herd health data and to identify indications for antimicrobial treatment, antimicrobial agents used for each indication, and farm-level risk factors associated with AMU. Forty-eight randomly selected herds with more than 100 sows were selected from the herd register of 905 herds. The register data included AMU in sows, biosecurity evaluations, welfare index calculated by the Sikava…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Behavior and Welfare Studies · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Microbial infections and disease research
