Despite current antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASPs) being advocated by infectious disease specialists and discussed by national and international policy makers, ASPs coverage remains limited to only certain hospitals as well as specific service lines within hospitals. The ASPs incorporate a variety of strategies to optimize antimicrobial agent use in the hospital, yet the exact set of interventions essential to ASP success remains unknown. Promotion of ASPs across clinical practice is crucial to their success to ensure standardization of antimicrobial agent use within an institution. To effectively accomplish this standardization, providers who actively engage in antimicrobial agent prescribing should participate in the establishment and support of these programs. Hence, surgeons need to play a major role in these collaborations. Surgeons must be aware that judicious antibiotic utilization is an integral part of any stewardship program and necessary to maximize clinical cure and minimize emergence of antimicrobial resistance. The battle against antibiotic resistance should be fought by all healthcare professionals. If surgeons around the world participate in this global fight and demonstrate awareness of the major problem of antimicrobial resistance, they will be pivotal leaders. If surgeons fail to actively engage and use antibiotics judiciously, they will find themselves deprived of the autonomy to treat their patients.Keywords: antibiotic prophylaxis; intra-abdominal infection; necrotizing soft tissue infection; surgical site infection; trauma A lthough most surgeons are aware of the problem of antimicrobial resistance, most underestimate this problem in their own hospital. Surgeons should always optimize antimicrobial management to maximize clinical outcome and minimize emergence of antimicrobial resistance. The necessity of formalized systematic approaches to the optimization of antibiotic therapy in the setting of surgical units worldwide, both for elective and emergency admissions, has become increasingly urgent.In 2013, a Cochrane review was published to estimate the effectiveness of professional interventions in antibiotic stewardship for hospital inpatients and to evaluate the impact of these interventions on reducing the incidence of antimicrobial resistance or Clostridium difficile infection [1]. The results showed that interventions to reduce excessive antibiotic prescribing to hospital inpatients were able to reduce antimicrobial resistance and hospitalacquired infections (HAIs), improving clinical outcome. The meta-analysis supported the use of restrictive interventions when the need is urgent, but suggested that persuasive and restrictive interventions are equally effective after six months.