Okay.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee. Thank you very much for inviting me to be a witness and to participate in this very important discussion.
As you know, my name is Yvonne Shevchuk. I'm an educator within the College of Pharmacy and Nutrition, but I'm also a licensed pharmacist. I've been a member of the infectious disease team at a hospital in Saskatoon for over 30 years. I've also been a member of the antimicrobial utilization subcommittee in that region for a long time. I've been involved in many committees and activities over the years, with a focus on optimal antibiotic use, or what's commonly referred to as antimicrobial stewardship, or AMS.
I think others have told you that AMS is one of the four pillars of the federal framework and action plan on antimicrobial resistance in use in Canada, along with surveillance, infection prevention and control, and research and innovation.
I think you and your committee have also heard antimicrobial resistance described as a global health threat, so I'm sure you don't need further reminding of that. The World Health Organization and many countries have recognized this and have started plans. I don't want to focus on that, but I guess I do want to remind people that it's not the only crisis we face in Canada. We hear about the opioid crisis. We hear about mental health and the heart-breaking rates, for example, of suicide in indigenous young people, and other health crises. We have to compete with that, and I hope that I'm able to convince you that antimicrobial resistance needs to be a priority as well. Even though those other things may be seen in the media or focused on, AMR is important as well.
Perhaps picture in your mind a fairly young hemodialysis patient who has a family at home, hasn't been able to work because of frequent hemodialysis, and is looking forward to a kidney transplant. He gets that kidney transplant. However, he ges the complication of infection. If you get a transplant, you have to be on immunosuppressant drugs in order to keep that transplant, and that inhibits your body's ability to fight an infection. He gets an infection and he doesn't survive that infection, because it's resistant and because we don't have good antibiotic choices to help him survive.
I don't think we want to get to a place where that's an everyday reality. It's not perhaps extremely common in Canada right now, but it happens. That's not an unrealistic scenario.
With regard to optimal antimicrobial use, people don't always think of prevention as a key element in that. In that connection, I have another short story to share with you.
My daughter is a third-year university student, and she does a lot of volunteer work with pretty vulnerable populations. She knows that if she were to transmit influenza, it could be very serious for them, so she goes for a flu shot every year, which is pretty responsible. She also has mid-terms and assignments and doesn't have time to get sick. She did that a couple of weeks ago and posted it on social media. I don't know exactly what it was, but I don't think it matters. She just posted to her friends that she went for a flu shot and reminded them that they might want to do the same.
I was so surprised. Complete strangers essentially attacked her, saying that she was poisoning her body, that she was responsible for killing thousands of children. Those are the very dangerous views of a group within the country and the world, “anti-vaxxers”, as they're sometimes referred to. If we want to continue to enjoy the health that we have as Canadians, we must keep up our immunization rates. We need to look for new vaccines and new areas to prevent infection.
I like to remind my students that if you prevent the infection from occurring, you don't even have to think about using an antibiotic. It doesn't even come into the picture. Although my focus is appropriate antibiotic use, I don't think we want to forget how important the prevention pillar is in all of this.
Curbing antimicrobial use is a key strategy in our fight against antimicrobial resistance. It's estimated that at least 30% to 50% of all antibiotic prescriptions written in this country are inappropriate. That's kind of a mind-boggling number. I think we could all work to improve in that area.
The complexity of this issue has been talked about a lot. I do agree that it is complex moving forward. Different agencies—federal, provincial, and territorial groups—have differing responsibilities. It's sometimes difficult to make those things all come together, but I don't think we should use the complexity of the problem as a reason not to move forward. It's even more complex because, as has been mentioned by other speakers, it's not just about human health; it's also about animal health and it's also about the agrifood sector. It's referred to as a “one health” approach, but it needs to be somebody's job. Somebody needs to be put in charge of antimicrobial resistance and stewardship in Canada. It's a big enough job that it shouldn't be added to somebody else's already large portfolio. I think it deserves the attention of “this is the job you have”. There's a lot of work to do in terms of setting clear goals and timelines and getting all sorts of other stakeholders involved—clinicians, professional organizations, and industry. It's a big job.
My view is that a nationally coordinated effort is required. We have pockets of excellent work in this country where great things are happening. What we don't know is whether that will work in a different context, in a different region, in a different part of the country. We need a coordinated mechanism for spreading these good practices and also for learning from each other.
We don't have benchmarks or targets right now for antimicrobial use. What is appropriate and what's not? Measurement is pretty inconsistent and spotty. It depends on where you are in the country and whether you're talking about hospitals or community or long-term care. We don't necessarily know where to target our efforts. Good data is essential. Proper data collection or surveillance is a key element or starting place in our strategy.
We do know certain strategies that work. A good example is that when Accreditation Canada began assessing institutions with an ROP, or required organizational practice, for AMS, institutions responded. They stepped up to the plate. It was maybe not in a perfect way, and there's certainly room for improvement, but we saw change. We saw change in things that happened within institutions. Obviously they would welcome much more support, including funding, but it was a positive move.
Those actions don't translate to the community, though. We need different solutions in the community, because Accreditation Canada isn't responsible there.
We talk a lot about education. It is very critical to educate the many prescribers—physicians, nurse practitioners, dentists, pharmacists, veterinarians—and the patients about AMR and AMS, but we also have good data to show that education alone is not effective. You need to combine it with other strategies or methods to make things happen, to make change happen. We need processes in place so that it's extremely easy to do the right thing and very difficult to do the wrong thing.
I was part of a group of individuals invited by HealthCareCAN and the national collaborating centre for infectious diseases to help organize and coordinate a round table discussion on this topic. I think this has been discussed with the committee. There is a report putting the pieces together. It includes 10 recommendations. I have talked about some of these recommendations, but I can't really discuss them all in the time period I have. I would just like to say there are documents available with recommendations that are a wonderful starting place.
I have a very good friend who had two knees replaced. I saw her recently, and she's overjoyed with the results. She can walk with her husband. She entered a five-kilometre charity walk just because she could. I have thought about, though, what it would have been like for her if the conversation with that surgeon had been different. If the conversation had gone, “We know you need knee replacements. We know that would solve your pain, but there's a small chance of infection. If that infection happens, we don't have an antibiotic to cure it. Rather than take that risk, rather than replace your knees, you can have a life of chronic pain and basically live like a couch potato.” I think that would be a future that we don't want in this country.
If we don't manage antimicrobial stewardship and the other pillars we've talked about, that's not necessarily an unrealistic view of the future. I'm hoping that this committee can advocate for that change so that we don't have to think about that future.