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Animal Antibiotics: FDA Asks Drug Companies To Limit Overuse Amid Health Concerns

AP  |  By Posted: 04/11/2012 11:02 am Updated: 04/14/2012 12:34 am

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration called on drug companies Wednesday to help limit the use of antibiotics in farm animals, a decades-old practice that scientists say has contributed to a surge in dangerous, drug-resistant bacteria.

Antibiotic drugs like penicillin are routinely mixed with animal feed and water to help livestock, pigs and chickens put on weight and stay healthy in crowded feeding lots. Scientists have warned that such use leads to the growth of antibiotic-resistant germs that can be passed on to humans.

The FDA has struggled for decades with how to tackle the problem because the powerful agriculture industry argues the drugs are a key part of modern meat production.

Under the new FDA guidelines, the agency recommends antibiotics be used "judiciously," or only when necessary to keep animals healthy. The agency also wants to require a veterinarian to prescribe the drugs. They can currently be purchased over-the-counter by farmers.

"Now you have a veterinarian who will be consulting and providing advice to these producers, and we feel that is an important element to assure that they are in fact using these drugs appropriately," said William Flynn, a deputy director in FDA's veterinary medicine center.

The draft recommendations by the FDA are not binding, and the agency is asking drug manufacturers' to voluntarily put the proposed limits in place. Drug companies would need to adjust the labeling of their antibiotics to remove so-called production uses of the drugs. Production uses include increased weight gain and accelerated growth, which helps farmers save money by reducing feed costs.

The FDA hopes drugmakers will phase out language promoting non-medical uses within three years.

"This is the most sweeping action the agency has undertaken in this area, as this covers all antibiotics used in meat and poultry production that are important to human health," said Laura Rogers, director of the Pew Charitable Trusts' campaign on industrial farming.

But some public health advocates said they do not trust the drug industry to voluntarily restrict its own products.

FDA officials said that a formal ban would have required individual hearings for each drug, which could take decades.

"The process we would have to go through is a formal hearing process, product-by-product that is extremely cumbersome," said Mike Taylor, FDA Deputy Commissioner for Foods. "There's no point in going through those legalistic proceedings when companies are willing to make this shift voluntarily."

Taylor said the FDA has consulted closely with drugmakers, and expects them to support the measures.

An estimated 80 percent of all antibiotics sold in the U.S. wind up on animal farms. Neither industry nor the government track what percentage of those drugs is used to boost animal weight, but many experts believe the vast majority go toward non-medical uses.

The debate over antibiotics has long pitted the benefits for producing safe, low-cost meat against the risk of contributing to dangerous antibiotic-resistant bacteria that can infect humans.

The National Pork Producers Council said Wednesday that the FDA "did not provide compelling evidence" that antibiotic use in livestock is unsafe.

But FDA officials said the scientific literature supports the role that indiscriminate use of antibiotics plays in reducing the effectiveness of antibiotics in humans.

"We think the science is very solid to support this effort to address these issues," Taylor said.

The rollout from FDA comes at an unusual time in the agency's attempts to curb antibiotic use in animals. Last month a federal court judge ordered the agency to take action on its own 35-year-old rule that would have banned non-medical use of two popular antibiotics, penicillin and tetracycline, in farm animals.

The FDA issued the rule in 1977 but never enforced it, following vigorous pushback from members of Congress and lobbyists for farmers and drugmakers. Four public safety groups sued the agency to act on the regulation, winning the case handed down in the U.S. District Court of Southern New York on March 22. The agency was given 60 days to appeal the decision.

FDA's Taylor said he believes the voluntary guidelines can achieve the same goal as the court ruling in less time.

The waning effectiveness of antibiotics has been a global health concern for several decades, attracting the attention of the World Health Organization, the Institute of Medicine and other medical groups. As bacteria have grown more resistant, new and more deadly forms of malaria, staph and other infections that were once easily treatable have emerged across the globe.

Experts say overuse of antibiotics in both animals and humans has contributed to the problem. Both medical societies and government agencies have launched educational programs designed to educate physicians on appropriate prescribing of antibiotics.

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration called on drug companies Wednesday to help limit the use of antibiotics in farm animals, a decades-old practice that scientists say has contributed...
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration called on drug companies Wednesday to help limit the use of antibiotics in farm animals, a decades-old practice that scientists say has contributed...
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03:20 PM on 04/17/2012
"Lip service" comes to mind. First of all, how hard can it be for the behemoths that control the meat industry to get a prescription, or even two, from a veterinarian? Say, for a whole feedlot? I confess my ignorance, please do tell me. Second of all, and I have yet to decide whether that is even more ludicrous, clear labeling for a prescription requirement is left to the discretion of drug manufacturers. “Voluntarily” is the key word here. I’m afraid you’re going to have to do better, FDA (fascinating, btw, how the very same agency that sees nothing wrong with letting antibiotics and GMO run wild in our food system also raids family farms to "protect" public health against raw milk.)
Sign the petition to demand a ban on the sub-therapeutic use of antibiotics on food-producing animals: http://www.nourish9billion.org/sign-the-petition
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Amy Fleischer
09:13 PM on 04/14/2012
Won't farmers or meat production companies just pay off the vets to give them more prescriptions? :/
05:46 PM on 04/13/2012
Just another reason to eat organic meat only and preferably grass fed.
07:21 AM on 04/13/2012
wait a minute.

"FDA tightens rules" or "FDA asks drug companies to Limit overuse"

which one is it?

I dont like this culture of diminishing the role of government. the future we need is GOOD government not LESS government. That is exactly where repugs get it wrong.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
02:27 AM on 04/13/2012
We need a new law to ban the use of antibiotics, except when an animal is obviously sick already and there is a likelihood it is from bacteria. This current law requiring years of hearings is terrible. It is so sad that the farm lobby is so powerful. If we could ban big donations, that would be a solution, but this Supreme Court is terrible.
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Ginta California
10:55 PM on 04/12/2012
Theirs going to be so many pharmacuiticals in beef soon you'll need a perscription.
05:20 PM on 04/12/2012
They keep blaming us humans not finishing our antibiotic med for the rampant antibiotic resistant germs in the world, but that is just a lie. It is 100% the low doses being put in out food that is the culprit. Out great food industry looking out for us all by maximizing their bottom line, just like Pink Slime and Mad Cow Disease.
05:08 PM on 04/12/2012
The era of anti-biotics is almost over. Most of them have been derived from molds. When we invent one, it never kills ALL (eradicates) an entire species of bacteria. There are always a few with a different set of genes that give them resistance. These survive and pass their genetic resistance to their offspring. Eventually, with continual use of the same antibiotic, it will cease to be effective. Therefore, we should learn to use anti-biotics judiciously and sparingly in order to extend the time they will be effective.
03:49 PM on 04/12/2012
As long as crowded feed lots continue there is no way antibios can be stopped.People want their dollar menu foods.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
02:28 AM on 04/13/2012
Crowded feed lots are inhumane.
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Conspiracy2Riot
Go ahead, try and eat that fiat currency
03:11 PM on 04/12/2012
Well if they can be purchased over the counter, try changing THAT practice like they did with all the stuff we learned could cop you a buzz. Moved pretty fast on those OTC drugs didn't they?
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01:13 PM on 04/12/2012
Beef. Still the single most inefficient method of producing eatable protein on the planet. Yee haw!
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
06:23 AM on 04/13/2012
I will have mine medium rare.
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listgirl3
Always remember to tip your ninja.
12:10 PM on 04/12/2012
It's a step. if people want to eat animals, and people want to raise animals for human consumption...there's really no need not to do this naturally. Really.
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grittyreboot
LOLitical activist
11:21 AM on 04/12/2012
Antibiotics are a great tool. but as with everything else, they can be misused.

Studies show that antibiotic use in juvenile animals (this includes humans by the way) alter the composition of their gut microbes, and in ways that are not quite understood, alters the individuals' ability to metabolize fats. Cattle (and some humans) that have been treated with antibiotics when young tend to have a higher probability to get obese. This is good for cattle farmers, as they get a better price for their stock. The down side is we generate disease resistant microbes...

Anti-biotics are good, but only when used responsibly. Large scale cattle farmers abuse antibiotics for personal profit, but endanger us all in doing so.
10:15 AM on 04/12/2012
the FDA "asks"..? thats not government at all. thats not law, thats not reform. government > corporations. what you stupid republicans dont get is the difference between good government and bad government.
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blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
06:24 AM on 04/13/2012
welcome to Whiny republican Land.
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Lily P
Sofa King Awesome!
10:01 AM on 04/12/2012
Grain fed cattle need antibiotics in their food, because cows stomach cannot process the grain without it. Buy grass fed beef from local farms. Any animal that is unaturally fed/kept will need antibiotics for infections. Unfortunately, Americans have been marketed to that you need tons of meat with every single meal. Truth is, you don't. Cut down, and buy better products. You'll be glad you did.
10:28 AM on 04/12/2012
Truth is, cows are exceptionally good at digesting grain. Antibiotics can kill ruminal microbes that are imperative to digestion. Grain can also do this by lowering the rumen's pH to a level that is inhospitable to the microbes. This can be countered by giving access to hay which acts as a buffer and increases salivary bicarbonate production. Antibiotics are not given for digestion purposes. They are given either as treatment or as prophylaxis for disease. Grass fed beef is a great alternative if you can afford it, but honestly we do not have the amount of land necessary to raise enough grass fed beef to meet demand. The US has simultaneously one of the safest and cheapest food supplies in the world. If you can afford higher-cost alternatives and feel morally obligated to do so, then by all means go for it. But, feedlot beef continues to give lower income families and hungry carnivores alike a fresh, safe, low-cost, and high protein option.
10:31 AM on 04/12/2012
Somehow my comment ended up under the wrong thread, sorry!
10:44 AM on 04/12/2012
Excellent point. I couldn't agree more.