Use Science In Regulating Antibiotics, Agriculture Coalition Says
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
WASHINGTON, D.C.-- A coalition of agricultural organizations sent a letter yesterday to Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., who is seeking to restrict severely antibiotic use in livestock and poultry production, pointing out the stringent federal approval process and regulation of antibiotics, the lack of human health risks from their judicious use in livestock production and the benefits they offer in food animal production.
Members of the coalition include the American Farm Bureau Federation, American Feed Industry Association, American Meat Institute, Animal Health Institute, American Veterinary Medical Association, National Cattleman’s Beef Association, National Chicken Council, National Milk Producers Federation, National Pork Producers Council, National Meat Association and the National Turkey Federation.
Slaughter in February asked food
companies to submit to her by June 15 their
purchasing policies related to antibiotic use
in food animals. She is the primary
author of the “Preservation of Antibiotics for
Medical Treatment Act” (H.R. 965), which seeks
to ban the use in livestock and poultry
production of several classes of antibiotics
employed for preventing and controlling
diseases and for promoting nutritional
efficiency.
“Antibiotic used in
veterinary medicine are reviewed and approved
by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration
(FDA),” the coalition stated in its
letter. For animal antibiotics, the
safety assessment is more stringent than that
for human antibiotics in three ways: 1) If
there are risks to humans, FDA will not approve
the antibiotic for animals; 2) FDA requires a
food safety assessment to ensure meat is safe;
and 3) FDA studies the pharmaceutical
thoroughly to guarantee it does not increase
the risk of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in
food. The coalition further explained
that FDA recently issued new regulations
that effectively prohibit the use in food
animals of “medically important” antibiotics
for improving nutritional efficiency. The rules
also ensure veterinarians will be involved in
overseeing all uses of these
products.
The coalition cited several
published, peer-reviewed risk assessments
showing any threat to human health from
antibiotic use in livestock and poultry
production is negligible, and pointed out many
of the bacterial illnesses becoming resistant
to antibiotics in human medicine have little or
no link to antibiotic use in food
animals.
Finally, the coalition cited
some of the benefits of judicious antibiotic
use in livestock and poultry. “The
careful use of antibiotics to keep animals in
top health is an important first step in
providing the safest possible meat supply,” the
letter said.
“All public health professionals,
including veterinarians, are serious about
reducing the risks of antibiotic resistance and
are working to minimize those risks,” they
wrote. “It is vital that public policy
decisions about the use of these products be
made on the basis of science and risk
assessment.”
When it comes to their use
in livestock and poultry production, concluded
the coalition, “The research is clear that the
contribution of using antibiotics in
food-animal production to the human burden of
antibiotic resistance is quite small, if it
exists at all.”
You can also view the full response letter here.
share on facebook
share on twitter