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Identifying hotspots for antibiotic resistance emergence and selection, and elucidating pathways to human exposure: Application of a systems-thinking approach to aquaculture systems

Authors :
Phuc Pham Duc
Chadag Vishnumurthy Mohan
Maria Garza
Karl M. Rich
Phuc Nguyen Thien Le
Barbara Häsler
Md. Ahasanul Hoque
Mohammed Nurul Absar Khan
Mahmoud Eltholth
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Alexandra Adams
Clarence C. Tam
Abdul Ahad
Nguyen Tuong Linh
Nguyen Thanh Phuong
Lucy A. Brunton
Dang Kim Pham
Phan Thi Van
Ana Mateus
Andrew P. Desbois
Javier Guitian
Barbara Wieland
Source :
Science of the Total Environment, The Science of the Total Environment
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Aquaculture systems are highly complex, dynamic and interconnected systems influenced by environmental, biological, cultural, socio-economic and human behavioural factors. Intensification of aquaculture production is likely to drive indiscriminate use of antibiotics to treat or prevent disease and increase productivity, often to compensate for management and husbandry deficiencies. Surveillance or monitoring of antibiotic usage (ABU) and antibiotic resistance (ABR) is often lacking or absent. Consequently, there are knowledge gaps for the risk of ABR emergence and human exposure to ABR in these systems and the wider environment. The aim of this study was to use a systems-thinking approach to map two aquaculture systems in Vietnam – striped catfish and white-leg shrimp – to identify hotspots for emergence and selection of resistance, and human exposure to antibiotics and antibiotic-resistant bacteria. System mapping was conducted by stakeholders at an interdisciplinary workshop in Hanoi, Vietnam during January 2018, and the maps generated were refined until consensus. Thereafter, literature was reviewed to complement and cross-reference information and to validate the final maps. The maps and component interactions with the environment revealed the grow-out phase, where juveniles are cultured to harvest size, to be a key hotspot for emergence of ABR in both systems due to direct and indirect ABU, exposure to water contaminated with antibiotics and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and duration of this stage. The pathways for human exposure to antibiotics and ABR were characterised as: occupational (on-farm and at different handling points along the value chain), through consumption (bacterial contamination and residues) and by environmental routes. By using systems thinking and mapping by stakeholders to identify hotspots we demonstrate the applicability of an integrated, interdisciplinary approach to characterising ABU in aquaculture. This work provides a foundation to quantify risks at different points, understand interactions between components, and identify stakeholders who can lead and implement change.<br />Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image<br />Highlights • The contribution of aquaculture to antibiotic resistance is not well understood. • Systems mapping was used for two aquaculture systems in Vietnam. • Hotspots were identified for the emergence/selection of antibiotic resistance. • Human exposure points to antibiotics and antibiotic-resistant bacteria were mapped. • Findings inform risk quantification and identification of stakeholders to effect change.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment, The Science of the Total Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0d5c7d23aa2aa264da96e2b0944336d