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FDA: Some Livestock Antibiotics Will Be Limited

MARY CLARE JALONICK   01/ 4/12 05:02 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday ordered farmers to limit the use of a type of antibiotics they give livestock because it could make people more resistant to a key antibiotic that can save lives, encouraging news for public health advocates who say such animal antibiotics are overused.

FDA officials have been clear in stating their belief that antibiotics given to animals before slaughter are linked to growing antibiotic resistance in humans, but it has struggled with how to tackle the problem because the powerful livestock industry says the drugs are needed to keep animals healthy.

Calls for limiting antibiotics have been stronger than ever as consumers have become more aware of the issue and are clamoring for antibiotic-free meat.

The agency's order Wednesday will limit cephalosporins, which are given to some cattle, swine, chickens and turkeys before slaughter. The drugs are used to treat pneumonia, skin infections and meningitis, among other diseases, in humans.

Cephalosporins, which are injected directly into eggs or animals, are not as widely used as many other antibiotics that are mixed with animal feed in massive quantities. But they are significant because the drugs often are used in life-threatening situations for humans, and lives could be lost if resistance is built up over time.

"This is an incredibly critical class of antibiotics for humans," said David Wallinga, a physician at the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy in Minnesota and a member of the Keep Antibiotics Working coalition. "In the medical world you'd call it a `big gun' or a `drug of last resort.' It's effective against a pretty broad spectrum of bacteria."

In the order, the FDA said the drugs can be particularly critical for treating children and some adults for salmonella poisoning. The agency said human exposure to food containing antibiotic-resistant bacteria like certain forms of salmonella is "the most significant risk to the public health associated with antimicrobial resistance." In recent years, the number of foodborne outbreaks associated with antibiotic-resistant pathogens has been increasing, a trend the agency associates with animal antibiotic use.

Because of these concerns, public health advocates long have pushed the government to force livestock producers to use fewer antibiotics. Some farmers use them in healthy animals to spur growth or to keep them well in unsanitary feedlot conditions.

The FDA's order to limit cephalosporins is not a total ban, and the agency would still allow some uses of the drug in agriculture. Advocates praised the move but said it didn't go far enough.

"This is a modest first step by the FDA, but we're really just looking at the tip of the iceberg," said Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., a microbiologist who has pressured the government on the issue. "We don't have time for the FDA to ploddingly take half-measures. We are staring at a massive public health threat in the rise of antibiotic-resistant superbugs. We need to start acting with the swiftness and decisiveness this problem deserves."

Industry groups said after the announcement that they opposed the limits and argued there isn't enough evidence that their antibiotic use is unsafe. Kristina Butts of the National Cattlemen's Beef Association said antibiotic resistance is a complex issue and "the top priority for cattle producers is to raise healthy cattle because healthy cattle are the foundation of a safe, wholesome food supply."

Tom Super of the National Chicken Council said antibiotics are already used sparingly in chicken production and that additional regulations could take medical decisions out of the hands of veterinarians.

This is not the first time the FDA has sought to limit cephalosporins. In 2008 the agency said it would limit the drugs for animals, citing the importance of cephalosporins for treating disease in humans. But the Bush administration reversed that decision just before it was to take effect after receiving several hundred letters from drug companies and farm animal trade groups.

In the first two years after President Barack Obama took office, FDA officials repeatedly said antibiotics in agriculture pose a serious public health threat and said they would act on the issue. But they had taken no concrete steps to limit the drugs until Wednesday's announcement.

In a statement on the FDA website, the agency said the announcement is "among a number of ongoing FDA activities and initiatives intended to address concerns about the use of antimicrobial drugs in animal agriculture." Those include increased monitoring and voluntary guidelines for producers on how to use the drugs judiciously.

Laura Rogers of the Pew Campaign on Human Health and Industrial Farming says the issue is "often more emotional than intellectual."

To farmers, she says, it often seems that public health advocates are telling them how to do their jobs. But she said the need for change will be even greater as the market responds to consumer demand – grocery stores and restaurants now tout antibiotic-free meats.

"While this announcement today is a great first step," Rogers said, "more work needs to be done."

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WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday ordered farmers to limit the use of a type of antibiotics they give livestock because it could make people more resistant to a key anti...
WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday ordered farmers to limit the use of a type of antibiotics they give livestock because it could make people more resistant to a key anti...
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10:36 PM on 01/08/2012
This is the very reason Hay prices are raising. To mention ethonol profits sure thats correct but the saving on fuel is NOT being pass down to consumers. Prices now are above $3.50. Even chicken feed prices are high. The only winner in these record breakings are the stock and share holders. Once again the consumer and the animals that live off corn lose.
01:19 PM on 01/08/2012
Even in the best management systems with the happiest animals they can still cut themselves, develop foot infections, get septic joints, neonatal sepsis, etc. Food animals are still going to get antibiotics, just different ones which are either less effective for that situation or have a longer withdrawal time. The cephalosporins have a very short withdrawal time for both meat and milk, which is part of the reason they are so amazingly useful. This edict doesn’t take them away entirely – it just limits us to using them on-label, or off only under specific circumstances. And that's what worries us, because although one formulation of ceftiofur is able to be used intravenously it’s not labeled for that purpose. We can still use penicillin but it’s not nearly as good, or aminoglycosides which have an 18-24 month meat withdrawal. So you can risk drug residues and systemically infected meat, or allow us a potential cure with ceftiofur. We use it for regional IV perfusion to help clear up localized limb infections, mix it with bone cement to make antibiotic-impregnated beads, inject it into septic joints, the list goes on. All of this is off-label, safe for the animal, and more effective than other options. If the FDA wants to have a real impact on antibiotic use in food animals they should quit allowing penicillin and tetracyclines to be sold OTC and put them under veterinary supervision. Please remember, any animal can become sick or injured.
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DavidMG
OWS Senior
03:47 PM on 01/07/2012
In 1973, in "The Supermarket Handbook," my nutritionst wife and I exposed the problems of antibiotics in meat production (and other feed additives like hormones) that, in part, motivated us to become vegetarians. Now, 40 years later -- and possibly too late as some bacteria are already resitant to many antibiotics -- the FDA has taken a few small steps to address the serious effects this has on human health. Forty years - we have to do better!
http://www.cbsnews.com/​8301-504763_162-57352835-103917​04/​fda-restricts-certain-antibioti​cs-in-livestock/
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Happy Clb
03:27 PM on 01/07/2012
we're still stuck in the era of industrial production. even the internet is an off shoot of that with things going "viral". it's crowding and homogeneity of animals that leads to huge outbreaks and then they have to be over treated with antibiotics as a "preventative" measure. it's bad all around.
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catz1515
01:02 AM on 01/06/2012
for heaven sakes, profits before people and animals ALWAYS rules......the greed current lives on.
Oginikwe
I think therefore I'm dangerous
12:34 AM on 01/06/2012
I look forward to the meat industry either dying altogether or making the changes the consumer demands such as no antibiotics and humane treatment for the animals, for the workers, and at slaughter. Until that time, let us build our own food system where consumers know their farmers and know where their food comes from. Those of you who are quite comfortable with our present food systems, eat away, but educate yourself so you can at the very least, make knowledge choices of the risks you are taking.
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Karl Wilder
Chef Stirring The Pot Harlem
12:49 PM on 01/05/2012
'Some'...'limited'.

I am waiting for ALL BANNED. Get grass fed/finished from farmer's you know. Boycott grocery store crap meat.
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plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
12:42 PM on 01/05/2012
"...and that additional regulations could take medical decisions out of the hands of veterinarians."

Yeah, right. The whole Butterball investigation last week brought to light that they had only 4 (four!) veterinarians to oversee all their facilities, which crank out something like 10 million pounds of turkey, annually. Veterinary care on animal factory farms is almost as non-existent as animal welfare standards.
11:09 AM on 01/05/2012
Antibiotics or not, animals on factory farms aren't healthy.
08:12 AM on 01/05/2012
I want to point out that cephalosporin is being used very little in beef production if at all. It certainly isn't a main antibiotic that is used by beef producers. I am not sure where it is being used in any food production other than to treat mastitis in milk cows or in the poultry industry. It cant be used as an additive in feed or water and can only be used under the direction of a vetrinarian.

Some more information is available at: http://www.fda.gov/AnimalVeterinary/NewsEvents/CVMUpdates/ucm054434.htm
12:20 AM on 01/05/2012
go vegan reason number one billion and one.
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
09:22 AM on 01/05/2012
or buy free range meat.
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catz1515
01:01 AM on 01/06/2012
F&F YEP! Go vegan, best solution there is.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
11:48 PM on 01/04/2012
NO human effective antibiotics should be every used for livestock. Let them die. Better than creating resistant strains.

This is a good step in the right direction
07:33 AM on 01/05/2012
What about the use of these animals in pets then? If reducing resistant strains of bacteria is the goal, wouldn't the use of these same type of antibiotics on pets with whom people have daily contact with have a much higher chance of developing resistant strains than using them occassionally on animals with whom humans have very little contact with?

CEPH Cure tablets are used in pets. Straight from the Merck vet manual "Tablets for oral administration containing the second generation cephalosporin cefadroxil for the treatment of bacterial infections of the skin, soft tissue, respiratory tract and urogenital tract in dogs and cats"
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
09:23 AM on 01/05/2012
if get what your saying, my cats are not in the food chain.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
04:28 PM on 01/05/2012
We love our pets, we accept the risk, and it's not like the constant full herd low level antibiotic used in livestock. If we can, we should still use antibiotics for our pets, that are not effective or useful in humans.
11:00 PM on 01/04/2012
It's about time! Did you see the thing about the toxic megacolon superbug? http://nutritionfacts.org/videos/toxic-megacolon-superbug/
I-US
Beware the monsters lurking in word swamps.
10:06 PM on 01/04/2012
"Kristina Butts of the National Cattlemen's Beef Association said antibiotic resistance is a complex issue and 'the top priority for cattle producers is to raise healthy cattle because healthy cattle are the foundation of a safe, wholesome food supply.'"

--That's some impressive doublespeak.
Oginikwe
I think therefore I'm dangerous
12:29 AM on 01/06/2012
Boy, is it ever!
07:57 PM on 01/04/2012
So who can we thank? How do we contact the FDA and praise them for this decision?