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Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

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  • Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock




    I read a few years ago of a kid doing his science experiment on measuring the amount of antibiotics in his drinking water. There was plenty - the prime suspect - feed lots. No one at clean water was making that measurement . . . .

    The numbers released quietly by the federal government this year were alarming. A ferocious germ resistant to many types of antibiotics had increased tenfold on chicken breasts, the most commonly eaten meat on the nation’s dinner tables. But instead of a learning from a broad national inquiry into a troubling trend, scientists said they were stymied by a lack of the most basic element of research: solid data.

    Eighty percent of the antibiotics sold in the United States goes to chicken, pigs, cows and other animals that people eat, yet producers of meat and poultry are not required to report how they use the drugs — which ones, on what types of animal, and in what quantities. This dearth of information makes it difficult to document the precise relationship between routine antibiotic use in animals and antibiotic-resistant infections in people, scientists say.

    Advocates contend that there is already overwhelming epidemiological evidence linking the two, something that even the Food and Drug Administration has acknowledged, and that further study, while useful for science, is not essential for decision making. “At some point the available science can be used in making policy decisions,” said Gail Hansen, an epidemiologist who works for Pew Charitable Trusts, which advocates against overuse of antibiotics.

    But scientists say the blank spots in data collection are a serious handicap in taking on powerful producers of poultry and meat who claim the link does not exist.

    “It’s like facing off against a major public health crisis with one hand tied behind our backs,” said Keeve Nachman, an environmental health scientist at the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future, which does research on food systems.

    Antibiotics are considered the crown jewels of modern medicine. They have transformed health by stopping infections since they went into broad use after World War II. But many scientists say that their effectiveness is being eroded by indiscriminate use, both to treat infections in people and to encourage growth in chickens, turkeys, cows and pigs.

    Whatever the cause, resistant bacteria pose significant public health risks. Routine infections once treated with penicillin pills now require hospitalizations and intravenous drip antibiotics, said Cecilia Di Pentima, director of clinical services at the Infectious Diseases Division at Vanderbilt University’s Department of Pediatrics. Infections from such strains of bacteria are believed to cause thousands of deaths a year.

    “The single biggest problem we face in infectious disease today is the rapid growth of resistance to antibiotics,” said Glenn Morris, director of the Emerging Pathogens Institute at the University of Florida. “Human use contributes to that, but use in animals clearly has a part too.”

    The Food and Drug Administration has tried in fits and starts to regulate the use of antibiotics in animals sold for food. Most recently it restricted the use of cephalosporins in animals — the most common antibiotics prescribed to treat pneumonia, strep throat and urinary tract infections in people.

    But advocates say the agency is afraid to use its authority. In 1977, the F.D.A. announced that it would begin banning some agricultural uses of antibiotics. The House and Senate appropriations committees — dominated by agricultural interests — passed resolutions against any such bans, and the agency retreated.

    Antibiotic use in people can be closely monitored through the vast infrastructure of the nation’s health care system, but there is no equivalent for animals, making it harder to track use on farms and ranches, said William Flynn, the deputy director for science policy at the F.D.A. Center for Veterinary Medicine.

    Many drugs are sold freely over the counter through feed suppliers, something the agency is trying to curb. In April, it proposed eliminating the use of certain antibiotics to stimulate growth in animals, and requiring meat and poultry producers to obtain a prescription before giving certain antibiotics to their animals. The agency just finished taking public comments to update the requirement. The scale of the problem became clear in 2010 when the F.D.A. began publishing total pharmaceutical company sales of antibiotics for use in animals raised for human consumption. It turned out that an overwhelming majority of antibiotics produced went to animals, not people. But there is still a glaring lack of information about how the drugs are used, scientists say.

    The one set of data that is regularly released — a measure of antibiotic-resistant bacteria carried by meat and poultry — contains such small samples that most scientists say they are reluctant to rely on it.

    The dramatic rise in the presence of salmonella on chicken breasts that was resistant to five or more classes of antibiotics, for example, was based on samples from just 171 breasts, an infinitesimal fraction of the more than eight billion birds raised and sold as food in the United States every year.

    Another problem is that regulatory responsibility is fractured. The F.D.A. regulates drugs, but agriculture is the purview of the federal Department of Agriculture. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also has a role.

    “There’s nobody in charge,” said Dr. Morris, who worked in the agriculture department during the Clinton administration. “And when no one’s in charge, it doesn’t get done.”

    John Glisson, the director of research programs at the U.S. Poultry and Egg Association, an industry group, said in an e-mail reply to questions that poultry feed mills “keep detailed records of antibiotic usage in the feed they manufacture.” The F.D.A. “has the authority to inspect and audit these records,” he said, adding that the agency “can have access to these records anytime.”

    But regulators say that in reality, access is not easy. While they may have authority to look at the records from any food manufacturer, they cannot collect or publish the data.

    Indeed, in July the National Pork Producers Council argued that its members should not be required to report on antibiotic prescriptions for their animals because it would add complexity.

    Regulators say it is difficult even to check for compliance with existing rules. They have to look for the residue of misused or banned drugs in samples of meat from slaughterhouses and grocery stores, rather than directly monitoring use of antibiotics on farms. “We have all these producers saying, ‘Yes, of course we are following the law,’ but we have no way to verify that,” said Dr. Hansen, of Pew Charitable Trusts.

    Dr. Flynn, the F.D.A. official, said the agency was moving as fast as it could to make sure antibiotics are used judiciously in farm animals. He called the plan to require animal producers to get prescriptions for certain antibiotics “an important shift.”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/04/he...ml?ref=science

  • #2
    Re: Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

    As a 'fat guy' i believe that all these antibiotics, hormones, chemicals and the like have an affect on some of us. i know I eat far less than my near rail-thin wife. But who knows how much of this schmidt I ingested with all the milk I drank (still do but now non-bht) over the years.

    I am a farmer who grows GMo stuff because this is what everyone plants. I havent asked, but I even wonder if I can buy non-gmo seed to plant anymore.

    Sugar usage has skyrocketed over the decaders (I started a thread on that one that went a long time).

    We are living longer on avge, but poisoning ourselves at the same time.

    what sense does all this make?

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    • #3
      Re: Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

      I have not looked into this much, but I will tell you that the three girls who live near us are not allowed to eat chicken due to the pervasive suspicion that hormones in poultry are behind the early onset of puberty. Parents are being advised to eliminate chicken from their daughters' diet by pediatricians.

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      • #4
        Re: Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

        Shouldn't all municipal water monitoring include testing for antibiotics.

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        • #5
          Re: Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

          Originally posted by don View Post
          Shouldn't all municipal water monitoring include testing for antibiotics.
          Municipal water supplies should also be tested for anti-depressants. But wouldn't it be better to simply ban the feeding of antibiotics to livestock as a standard practice? They do it for two reasons: To fatten livestock and to counteract the diseases caused by overcrowded, inhumane factory-farm living conditions. Mandate healthful living conditions for livestock and poultry and the need for antibiotics largely goes away.

          I'm a DES daughter. DES is a potent endocrine disruptor. Doctors gave it to pregnant women like M&Ms starting around 1940, supposedly to prevent miscarriages- although there was no data to support its use for that. DES caused a rare form of cancer, a lifelong increased risk of breast and prostate cancer, and damage to the reproductive organs of children who were exposed to the drug in-utero. It was pulled it from the market for human use between 1971-1975 once a bunch of young girls started dying of vaginal and cervical cancers. But for years after that farmers were allowed to feed it to their cattle to fatten them up. They were restricted in how much they could give and had to discontinue its use for several weeks prior to slaughter.

          Problem is when you feed in big cattle troughs some cows eat much more than others, thereby getting a higher dose of the drug. And if the price of beef suddenly shoots up, no farmer wants to wait two weeks before taking their cattle to the slaughterhouse... so they didn't wait. DES got into the food supply. It should never have been allowed. We should never permit the routine feeding of drugs to livestock. Period.

          Antibiotics in livestock and poultry feed are even more dangerous than DES since their overuse is giving us the very real threat of epidemic diseases with no treatments available.

          Genetically modifying grains to be able to tolerate pesticides that were never intended to be sprayed on food, never studied for their impact on health when ingested with food is another problem.

          Planting mono-crops on super farms, thereby reducing genetic diversity and increasing the risk of famine... What we have done to our food supply is insane.

          How is it that we could afford wholesome food all those years before these "innovations" happened, but now the farmers say they can't afford to stay in business and we won't be able to afford food if they don't do these things? Factory farms and petroleum-dependent-giant-mega-farms like Archer Daniels Midland haven't made food less expensive if the cheap food causes diseases and potential famine, and healthful food is too expensive for the average person to afford. Something is wrong with this picture.

          Perhaps when FIRE collapses and peak-cheap-oil becomes a real problem, wholesome, healthful food will once again be locally-produced by small, independent farmers.

          Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

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          • #6
            Re: Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

            My mom is an RN, she mentioned that this was a problem many years ago.

            This is no where near new information.

            There is no excuse for the widespread abuse of antibiotics in agriculture.

            Why do I need an Rx from a vet to give my dog a 10 day course of Flagil (sold OTC as Fish Zole) for Giardia when farmers can dump the stuff into livestock feed?

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            • #7
              Re: Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

              How is it that we could afford wholesome food all those years before these "innovations" happened, but now the farmers say they can't afford to stay in business and we won't be able to afford food if they don't do these things?

              Maybe because there were only 3-4 billion folks on the planet back then.

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              • #8
                Re: Antibiotics - just you, me and the livestock

                Originally posted by shiny! View Post
                What we have done to our food supply is insane.
                . . .

                Perhaps when FIRE collapses and peak-cheap-oil becomes a real problem, wholesome, healthful food will once again be locally-produced by small, independent farmers.
                It still is if you know where to look and what to avoid, at least in Europe.
                Man ist was man ißt.
                Justice is the cornerstone of the world

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