Antibiotic use in livestock

Antibiotic use in livestock is the use of antibiotics for any purpose in the husbandry of livestock, which includes not only the treatment or prophylaxis of infection but also the use of subtherapeutic doses in animal feed to promote growth and improve feed efficiency in contemporary intensive animal farming. Antimicrobials (including antibiotics and antifungals) and other drugs are used by veterinarians and livestock owners to increase the growth rates of livestock, poultry, and other farmed animals. The use of some drugs is banned in some countries due to food contamination or concern about increasing antibiotic resistance and what some consider antibiotic misuse. Other drugs may be used only under strict limits, and some organizations and authorities seek to further restrict the use of some or all drugs in animals. Other authorities, such as the World Organization for Animal Health, say that concerns for bacterial resistance in humans are less severe than restricting the availability of medicine is to animal health and the economical production of food.[1]

History of the practice

In 1910 in the United States, a meat shortage resulted in protests and boycotts.[2][3] After this and other shortages, the public demanded government research into stabilization of food supplies.[2] Since the 1900s, livestock production on United States farms has had to rear larger quantities of animals over a short period of time to meet new consumer demands. Along with the new large animal densities came the threat of disease, therefore requiring a greater disease control of these animals. In 1950, a group of United States scientists found that adding antibiotics to animal feed increases the growth rate of livestock.[2][4] American Cyanamid published research establishing the practice.[2]

By 2001 this practice had grown so much that a report by the Union of Concerned Scientists found that nearly 90% of the total use of antimicrobials in the United States was for non-therapeutic purposes in agricultural production.[5]

Antibiotics have an appropriate place in the humane care of illness in livestock, when they reduce the suffering of a sick animal or control the spread of the illness to nearby animals.[6] Thus, ideas that they should never be used in livestock husbandry are misguided.[6] Instead, the goal is to prevent the allowance of preventive use from being distorted into routine use, constituting overuse.[6]

Drugs and growth stimulation

Certain antibiotics, when given in low, sub-therapeutic doses, are known to improve feed conversion efficiency (more output, such as muscle or milk, for a given amount of feed) and/or may promote greater growth, most likely by affecting gut flora.[7]

Antibiotic Growth Promoters used in Livestock Production
drug class effect
Bambermycin increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in chickens, beef cattle, swine, and turkeys.[8][9]
Lasalocid Ionophore increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in beef cattle.[8][9]
Monensin Ionophore increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in beef cattle and sheep; promotes proficient milk production in dairy cows.[8][9]
Salinomycin Ionophore increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain.[9]
Virginiamycin peptide increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in chickens, swine, turkeys, and beef cattle.[8][9]
Bacitracin peptide increase weight gain and feed conversion ratio in chickens, turkeys, beef cattle, and swine; promotes egg production in chickens.[8][9]
Carbadox increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in swine.[8]
Laidlomycin increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in beef cattle.[8]
Lincomycin increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in chickens and swine.[8]
Neomycin/ oxytetracyclinee increase weight gain and feed conversion ratio in chickens, turkeys, swine, and beef cattle.[8]
Penicillin increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in chickens, turkeys, and swine.[8]
Roxarsonef increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in chickens and turkeys.[8]
Tylosin increase feed conversion ratio and weight gain in chickens and swine.[8]

Use in different livestock

In swine production

The use of antibiotics to increase the growth of pigs is most studied of all livestock. This use for growth rather than disease prevention is referred to as subtherapeutic antibiotic use. Studies have shown that administering low doses of antibiotics in livestock feed improves growth rate, reduces mortality and morbidity, and improves reproductive performance. It is estimated that over one-half of the antibiotics produced and sold in the United States is used as a feed additive. Although it is still not completely understood why and how antibiotics increase the growth rate of pigs, possibilities include metabolic effects, disease control effects, and nutritional effects.[10] While subtherapeutic use has many benefits for raising swine, there is growing concern that this practice leads to increased antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Antibiotic resistance occurs when bacteria are resistant to one or more microbial agents that are usually used to treat infection. There are three stages in the possible emergence and continuation of antibiotic resistance: genetic change, antibiotic selection, and spread of antibiotic resistance.[11]

In production of other livestock

Organic beef comes from cattle who have not been fed antibiotics.

Regulatory context

The use of drugs in food animals is regulated in nearly all countries. Historically, this has been to prevent alteration or contamination of meat, milk, eggs and other products with toxins that are harmful to humans. Treating a sick animal with drugs may lead to some of those drugs remaining in the animal when it is slaughtered or milked. Scientific experiments provide data that shows how long a drug is present in the body of an animal and what the animal's body does to the drug. Of particular concern are drugs that may be passed into milk or eggs. By the use of 'drug withdrawal periods' before slaughter or the use of milk or eggs from treated animals, veterinarians and animal owners ensure that the meat, milk and eggs is free of contamination.

These restrictions include not only poisons or drugs (such as penicillin) which may result in allergic reactions but also contaminants which may cause cancer. It is illegal in the USA to administer drugs or feed substances to animals if they have been shown to cause cancer.

One of the main restrictions is the amount that is administered to animals in the industry. These drugs should be administered to healthy livestock at a low concentration of 200 g per ton of feed. The amount distributed is also altered throughout the lifespan of livestock in order to meet specific growth needs.[12]

Legality of the use of specific drugs in animal medicine varies according to location.

Just as in human medicine, some drugs are available over the counter and others are restricted to use only on the prescription of a veterinary physician. In the USA, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requires specific labels on all drugs, giving directions on the use of the drug. For animals, this includes the species, dose, reason for giving the drug (indication) and the required withdrawal period, if any. Federal law requires laypersons to use drugs only in the manner listed. Veterinarians who have examined an animal or a herd of animals may issue a replacement label, giving new directions, based on their medical knowledge. It is illegal in the USA for any layperson to administer any drug to a food animal in a way not specific to the drug label. Over-the-counter drugs which may be used by laypersons include anti-parasite drugs (including fly sprays) and antimicrobials. These drugs can be applied as sprays, creams, injections, oral pills or fluids, or as a feed additive, depending on the drug and the label.

In December 2013, the FDA updated its regulations to try to begin reducing use of antibiotics for growth enhancement.[13] Significant lobbying comes from all directions, from those against tighter regulation to those who complain it doesn't go far enough.[14]

Administering drugs

Drugs can be administered to animals in a variety of means, just as with humans. Among these are topical (on the skin), by injection (including intravenous, subcutaneous, subcutaneous implants, intramuscular and intraperitonial), and orally.[15] Oral drugs can be in pill or liquid form, or can be given by mixing with feed or drinking water.[15] The appropriate route for treatment depends on the specific case and can vary by: illness, severity of illness, selected drug, age or condition of the animal, species of the animal, type of housing and other factors.[15] For animals that are not regularly fed a concentrated feed or which can be handled repeatedly, a slow-release injection might be the most appropriate. Some drugs are not available or appropriate in this form and should be delivered orally. For animals that are fed regularly (rather than grazing freely) or that can not be easily handled, the most appropriate means of administering the drug may be to include the drug in feed or water. This eliminates the stress of daily (or more frequent) handling of animals, which can make the animals more ill. Poultry are most commonly medicated in this fashion, as they are easily stressed to the point of dying. Administering the drug by feed also prevents injection wounds in animals.[15]

The timely administration of drugs is key to preventing animal suffering and economic loss to the farmer. Animals which are ill can infect other animals, and may become so ill that they can not be sold. A variety of techniques are used to monitor animals for illness so that they can be treated appropriately. Stress reduction, adequate nutrition, shelter, and quarantine of incoming stock are all important factors to promote growth and reduce illness and the need for active treatment.[15] The age and status of an animal is also important in determining correct treatment – a young animal or pregnant animal is at greater risk and are treated more aggressively than an older animal. Specifically in calves, the period in which they begin to separate from their mothers generates stress and makes them more susceptible to catching an infection like pneumonia. Antibiotics are commonly administered in the calves' feed during this time to fight the possibility of stress-induced infections.[15] Feed antibiotics are also used to prevent illnesses in calves caused by liver abscesses that develop during their last stages of growth.[15]

Use by country

European Union

Although the European Union banned the use of antibiotics as growth agents from 2006,[16] its use has not changed much until recently. In Germany, 1,734 tons of antimicrobial agents were used for animals in 2011 compared with 800 tons for humans. On the other hand, Sweden banned their use in 1986 and Denmark started cutting down drastically in 1994, so that its use is now 60% less.[17] In the Netherlands, the use of antibiotics to treat diseases increased after the ban on its use for growth purposes in 2006.[18] In 2011, the EU voted to ban the prophylactic use of antibiotics, alarmed at signs that the overuse of antibiotics is blunting their use for humans.[19]

United States

In 2011, a total of 13.6 million kilograms of antimicrobials were sold for use in food-producing animals in the United States,[20] which represents 80% of all antibiotics sold in the United States.[21] Of the antibiotics given to animals, 72 percent are "medically-important" drugs that are also used in humans, while the rest are drug classes like ionophores which are not used in human medicine.[20] Due to concerns about the overuse of antibiotics in food-producing animals, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration has implemented new industry guidelines that will restrict the use of medically-important drugs to uses "that are considered necessary for assuring animal health" and will require veterinary oversight.[22]

China

Of all countries, China produces and consumes the most antibiotics.[23]

Antibiotic use has been measured by checking the water near factory farms in China.[24][25] Measurements have also been taken from animal dung.[26]

Half of the antibiotics manufactured in China are used in the production of livestock.[27]

It was calculated that 38.5 million kg (or 84.9 million lbs) of antibiotics were used in China's swine and poultry production in 2012.[28]

India

In 2012 India manufactured about a third of the total amount of antibiotics in the world.[29]

Brazil

Brazil is the world's largest exporter of beef and the government regulates antibiotic use in the cattle production industry.[30]

Concerns about antibiotic resistance

More recently, there has been increased concern about the use of anti-microbials in animals (including pets, livestock, and companion animals) contributing to the rise in antibiotic resistant infections in humans. The use of antimicrobials has been linked to the rise of resistance in every drug and species where it has been studied, including humans and livestock. However, the role of antibiotic use in food animals – in contrast to the use of antibiotics in humans – in the rise of resistant infections in humans is in dispute. The use of antimicrobials in various forms is widespread throughout animal industry, and is presented as key to preventing animal suffering and economic loss. It is linked by some activist groups to animal welfare concern, large scale commercial agriculture, international food trade, agricultural protectionist laws, environmental protection (including climate change) and other topics, which make the aims of some groups on both sides of the debate difficult to untangle.

Around 70% of all antibiotics administered are used for livestock. Most of the drugs that are given to livestock are misused and incorporated into their diets daily for the purpose of weight gain or to treat illnesses. The overuse of the antibiotic in livestock is harmful to humans because it creates an antibiotic resistant bacteria that can be transferred through several different ways such as: raw meats, consumption of meats, or it can also be airborne. Antibiotic resistance is harmful to humans because it makes them resistant to certain types of drugs for different diseases, and makes it harder for them to fight off infections. [31]

Positions of advocates for restricting antibiotic use

The practice of using antibiotics for growth stimulation is problematic for these reasons:

Donald Kennedy, former director of the United States Food and Drug Administration, has said "There's no question that routinely administering non-therapeutic doses of antibiotics to food animals contributes to antibiotic resistance."[33] David Aaron Kessler, another former director of the FDA, said that "We have more than enough scientific evidence to justify curbing the rampant use of antibiotics for livestock, yet the food and drug industries are not only fighting proposed legislation to reduce these practices, they also oppose collecting the data."[34]

Some scientists have said that "all therapeutic antimicrobial agents should be available only by prescription for human and veterinary use."[35]

The Pew Charitable Trusts have stated that "hundreds of scientific studies conducted over four decades demonstrate that feeding low doses of antibiotics to livestock breeds antibiotic-resistant superbugs that can infect people. The FDA, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention all testified before Congress that there is a definitive link between the routine, non-therapeutic use of antibiotics in food animal production and the challenge of antibiotic resistance in humans."[36]

Moderate positions

The World Organisation for Animal Health has acknowledged the need to protect antibiotics but argued against a total ban on antibiotic use in animal production.[37]

Positions of advocates for status quo

In 2011 the National Pork Producers Council, an American trade association, has said "Not only is there no scientific study linking antibiotic use in food animals to antibiotic resistance in humans, as the U.S. pork industry has continually pointed out, but there isn't even adequate data to conduct a study."[38] The statement contradicts scientific consensus,[39] and was issued in response to a United States Government Accountability Office report that asserts "antibiotic use in food animals contributes to the emergence of resistant bacteria that may affect humans".[40]

The National Pork Board, a Government-owned corporation of the United States, has said that "the vast majority of producers use (antibiotics) appropriately."[41]

Effects of restricting antibiotic use

When government regulation restricts use of antibiotics the negative economic impact is not often considered.[42]

Regulation of antibiotics in livestock production would affect the business models of corporations including Tyson Foods, Cargill, and Hormel.[43]

Difficulties with determining relevant facts

It is difficult to set up a comprehensive surveillance system for measuring rates of change in antibiotic resistance.[44] The US Government Accountability Office published a report in 2011 stating that government and commercial agencies had not been collecting sufficient data to make a decision about best practices.[45]

Specific resistance that has been identified

In the late 1980s doctors in Europe first reported that certain bacteria were becoming resistant to vancomycin.[46] They began to study whether there was a connection between resistance and the practice of feeding a drug related to vancomycin to animals as a growth stimulant.[46] Vancomycin-resistant enterococci can spread from animals to humans.[47]

The appearance of CC398, a methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus has been attributed to antibiotics use in livestock production.[48]

The appearance of Carbapenem resistant enterobacteriaceae has been attributed in part to antibiotic use in livestock.[49]

Mechanisms for transfer to humans

There is evidence that a large proportion of resistant E. coli isolates causing blood stream infections in people are from livestock produced as food.[50]

When manure from antibiotic-fed swine is used as fertilizer elsewhere, the manure may be contaminated with bacteria which can infect humans.[51]

Action and advocacy by country

Legislation and activism worldwide have aimed at restricting antibiotic use in livestock.

European Union

On 1 January 2006 the European Union banned the non-medicinal use of antibiotics in livestock production.[52]

United States

Some grocery stores have policies about voluntarily not selling meat produced by using antibiotics to stimulate growth. In 2012 in the United States advocacy organization Consumers Union organized a petition asking the store Trader Joe's to discontinue the sale of meat produced with antibiotics.[53]

The U.S. Animal Drug User Fee Act was passed by Congress in 2008 and requires that drug manufacturers report all sales of antibiotics into the food animal production industry.[54][55]

Some proposed legislation in the US has failed to be adopted.[56] The Animal Drug and Animal Generic Drug User Fee Reauthorization Act of 2013 proposes other regulation.

In the United States the danger of emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains due to wide use of antibiotics to promote weight gain in livestock was determined by the United States Food and Drug Administration in 1977, but nothing effective was done to prevent the practice. In March, 2012 the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, ruling in an action brought by the Natural Resources Defense Council and others, ordered the FDA to revoke approvals for the use of antibiotics in livestock which violated FDA regulations.[57] On 11 April 2012 the FDA announced a program to phase out unsupervised use of drugs as feed additives and, on a voluntary basis, convert approved uses for antibiotics to therapeutic use only, requiring veterinarian supervision of their use and a prescription.[58][59]

In response to consumer concerns about the use of antibiotics in poultry, in 2007, Perdue removed all human antibiotics from its feed and launched the Harvestland brand, under which it sold products that met the requirements for an “antibiotic-free” label. By 2014, Perdue had also phased out ionophores (antibiotics used in animals to lower production costs by promoting growth, and preventing disease) from its hatchery and began using the “antibiotic free” labels on its Harvestland, Simply Smart and Perfect Portions products.[60] By 2015, 52% of the company’s chickens were raised without the use of any type of antibiotics.[61]

China

In 2012 an American newspaper described the Chinese government's regulation of antibiotics in livestock production as "weak".[62]

India

In 2011 the Indian government proposed a "National policy for containment of antimicrobial resistance".[63] Other policies set schedules for requiring that food producing animals not be given antibiotics for a certain amount of time before their food goes to market.[64][65] A study released by Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) on 30 July 2014 found antibiotic residues in chicken. This study claims that Indians are developing resistance to antibiotics — and hence falling prey to a host of otherwise curable ailments. Some of this resistance might be due to large-scale unregulated use of antibiotics in the poultry industry. CSE finds that India has not set any limits for antibiotic residues in chicken and says that India will have to implement a comprehensive set of regulations including banning of antibiotic use as growth promoters in the poultry industry. Not doing this will put lives of people at risk.[66]

Brazil

Antibiotic resistant bacteria have been found in Brazilian cattle.[67]

South Korea

In 1998 some researchers reported use in livestock production was a factor in the high prevalence of antibiotic resistant bacteria in Korea.[68] In 2007 The Korea Times noted that Korea has relatively high usage of antibiotics in livestock production.[69] In 2011 the Korean government banned the use of antibiotics as growth promoters in livestock.[70]

New Zealand

In 1999 the New Zealand government issued a statement that they would not then ban the use of antibiotics in livestock production.[71] In 2007 ABC Online reported on antibiotic use in chicken production in New Zealand.[72]

Research into alternatives

Increasing concern due to the emergence of antibiotic resistant bacteria has led researchers to look for alternatives to using antibiotics in livestock.[73]

Probiotics, cultures of a single bacteria strain or mixture of different strains, are being studied in livestock as a production enhancer.[74]

Prebiotics are non-digestible carbohydrates. The carbohydrates are mainly made up of oligosaccharides which are short chains of monosaccharides. The two most commonly studied prebiotics are fructooligosaccharides (FOS) and mannanoligosaccharides (MOS). FOS has been studied for use in chicken feed. MOS works as a competitive binding site, as bacteria bind to it rather than the intestine and are carried out.[75]

Bacteriophages are able to infect most bacteria and are easily found in most environments colonized by bacteria, and have been studied as well.[73]

References

  1. Hamaide, Sybille de la (11 January 2012) Antibiotics for livestock vital to feed world: OIE. Reuters. Paris. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Ogle, Maureen (3 September 2013). "Riots, Rage and Resistance: A Brief History of How Antibiotics Arrived on the Farm". Scientific American. Retrieved 5 November 2013. This reference should be replaced with citations to a book later published by the same author
    • Ogle, Maureen. In meat we trust : an unexpected history of carnivore America. ISBN 978-0151013401.
  3. Reported locally in these:
    • "To Become Vegetarians", Mansfield (O.) News, January 17, 1910, p2
    • "150,000 at Cleveland Stop the Use of Meat" Syracuse Herald-Journal, January 25, 1910, p1
    • "Boycott on Meat is Rapidly Spreading; Men Who Are Blamed For High Price", Atlanta Constitution, January 25, 1910, p1
  4. Ogle cites To meet this new consumer demand for animal meat, the improved health management has since introduced about seventeen classes of antimicrobial drugs is approved for use in food animals in the United States today.
    • "They've Doubled Gains With New Drugs". Successful Farming 48 (6): 45. June 1950.
    • "Antibiotics Now Proved in Hog and Poultry Ratios, They're the Biggest Feeding News in 40 Years!". Successful Farming 49 (3): 33. March 1951.
  5. "Hogging It!: Estimates of Antimicrobial Abuse in Livestock". Union of Concerned Scientists. 2001.
  6. 1 2 3 Swain, Marian (2015-08-01), "Excessive use of antibiotics in livestock is creating huge problems. Here's how to fix it", Vox.com. Section "Banning all antibiotics in livestock isn't the solution".
  7. Christopher D. Reinhardt, MS, PhD, Last full review/revision March 2012 Merck Veterinary Manual: Antimicrobial Feed Additives
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Allen, Heather K.; Stanton, Thad B. (2014-01-01). "Altered egos: antibiotic effects on food animal microbiomes". Annual Review of Microbiology 68: 297–315. doi:10.1146/annurev-micro-091213-113052. ISSN 1545-3251. PMID 25002091.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Reinhardt, Christopher D. (2012), "Antimicrobial Feed Additives", in Aiello, Susan E.; Moses, Michael A., Merck Veterinary Manual, Merck & Co. and Merial, retrieved 4 November 2013
  10. Cromwell, G. L. (2002). "Why and How Antibiotics are Used in Swine Production". Animal Biotechnology 13 (1): 7-27. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1081/ABIO-120005767
  11. Adjiri-Awere A., Van Lunen T. A. (2005). "Subtherapeutic use of antibiotics in pork production: Risks and alternatives". Canadian Journal of Animal Science 85 (2): 117-130. http://pubs.aic.ca/doi/abs/10.4141/A04-041
  12. Graham, JP; Boland, JJ; Silbergeld, E (Jan–Feb 2007). "Growth promoting antibiotics in food animal production: an economic analysis". Public Health Reports 122 (1): 79–87. PMID 17236612.
  13. Dennis, Brady (2013-12-11), "FDA finalizes voluntary rules on phasing out certain antibiotics in livestock", Washington Post.
  14. Plumer, Brad (2013-12-14), "The FDA is cracking down on antibiotics at farms. Here's what you should know.", Washington Post.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Beef Procedures: Antibiotic Use". South Dakota State University. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  16. Regulation (EC) No 1831/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 September 2003 on additives for use in animal nutrition. OJ L 268, 18.10.2003, p. 29–43. CELEX:32003R1831
  17. Koch, Julia (20 Nov 2013). "Cutting Antibiotics: Denmark Leads Way in Healthier Pig Farming". Spiegel Online International. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
  18. Cogliani,, Carol; Goossens, Herman; Christina Greko (2011). "Restricting Antimicrobial Use in Food Animals: Lessons from Europe". Microbe Magazine. Retrieved 2014-05-22.
  19. Gilbert, Natasha (10 Jan 2012). "Rules tighten on use of antibiotics on farms". Nature.
  20. 1 2 FDA (2013)Summary Report on Antimicrobials Sold or Distributed for Use in Food-Producing Animals
  21. FDA (2012) Drug Use Review
  22. FDA (2013) Guidance for Industry #213: New Animal Drugs and New Animal Drug Combination Products Administered in or on Medicated Feed or Drinking Water of Food Producing Animals: Recommendations for Drug Sponsors for Voluntarily Aligning Product Use Conditions with GFI #209
  23. Tatlow, Didi Kirsten (18 February 2013). "Global Health Threat Seen in Overuse of Antibiotics on Chinese Pig Farms". rendezvous.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  24. Wei, R.; Ge, F.; Huang, S.; Chen, M.; Wang, R. (2011). "Occurrence of veterinary antibiotics in animal wastewater and surface water around farms in Jiangsu Province, China". Chemosphere 82 (10): 1408–1414. doi:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2010.11.067. PMID 21159362.
  25. Hu, X.; Zhou, Q.; Luo, Y. (2010). "Occurrence and source analysis of typical veterinary antibiotics in manure, soil, vegetables and groundwater from organic vegetable bases, northern China". Environmental Pollution 158 (9): 2992–2998. doi:10.1016/j.envpol.2010.05.023. PMID 20580472.
  26. Zhao, L.; Dong, Y. H.; Wang, H. (2010). "Residues of veterinary antibiotics in manures from feedlot livestock in eight provinces of China". Science of the Total Environment 408 (5): 1069–1075. doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2009.11.014. PMID 19954821.
  27. Wu, Alex (12 January 2012). "Livestock in China Given Too Many Antibiotics". The Epoch Times. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  28. Krishnasamy V., Otte J., Silbergeld E. (2015). "Antimicrobial use in Chinese swine and broiler poultry production". Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control 4 (17) http://www.aricjournal.com/content/4/1/17
  29. Gale, Jason; Narayan, Adi (7 May 2012). "Drug-Defying Germs From India Speed Post-Antibiotic Era – Bloomberg". bloomberg.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  30. Millen, D. D.; Pacheco, R. D. L.; Meyer, P. M.; Rodrigues, P. H. M.; De Beni Arrigoni, M. (2011). "Current outlook and future perspectives of beef production in Brazil". Animal Frontiers 1 (2): 46. doi:10.2527/af.2011-0017.
  31. Prescriptions for trouble: Using antibiotics to fatten livestock. Union of concerned Scientists. Retrieved 29 Nov 15. http://www.ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/our-failing-food-system/industrial-agriculture/prescription-for-trouble.html#.Vls-U79hSFU
  32. 1 2 3 4 Silbergeld, E. K.; Graham, J.; Price, L. B. (2008). "Industrial Food Animal Production, Antimicrobial Resistance, and Human Health". Annual Review of Public Health 29: 151–169. doi:10.1146/annurev.publhealth.29.020907.090904. PMID 18348709.
  33. McVeigh, Karen (19 September 2012). "Scientists: overuse of antibiotics in animal agriculture endangers humans". theguardian.com. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  34. Kessler, David Aaron (27 March 2013). "Antibiotics and the Meat We Eat". The New York Times (New York City: NYTC). ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  35. Gilchrist, M. J.; Greko, C.; Wallinga, D. B.; Beran, G. W.; Riley, D. G.; Thorne, P. S. (2006). "The Potential Role of Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations in Infectious Disease Epidemics and Antibiotic Resistance". Environmental Health Perspectives 115 (2): 313–316. doi:10.1289/ehp.8837. PMC 1817683. PMID 17384785.
  36. The Pew Charitable Trusts (15 October 2012). "Pew Comments on Proposed Antibiotics Legislation". pewtrusts.org. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  37. de La Hamaide, Sybille (11 January 2012). "Antibiotics for livestock vital to feed world: OIE | Reuters". reuters.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  38. "Antibiotic Resistance and Food Animal Production: a Bibliography of Scientific Studies (1969-2012)" (PDF). The Pew Charitable Trusts. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 August 2012.
  39. "Antibiotic Resistance: Agencies Have Made Limited Progress Addressing Antibiotic Use in Animals". U.S. Government Accountability Office. 7 September 2011. Antibiotics have saved millions of lives, but antibiotic use in food animals contributes to the emergence of resistant bacteria that may affect humans.
  40. Couric, Katie (10 February 2010). "Animal Antibiotic Overuse Hurting Humans?". CBS News. New York City: CBS. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  41. Phillips, I.; Casewell, M.; Cox, T.; De Groot, B.; Friis, C.; Jones, R.; Nightingale, C.; Preston, R.; Waddell, J. (2003). "Does the use of antibiotics in food animals pose a risk to human health? A critical review of published data". Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 53 (1): 28–52. doi:10.1093/jac/dkg483. PMID 14657094.
  42. Yukhananov, Anna (11 April 2012). "U.S. seeks voluntary antibiotic limits in livestock". reuters.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  43. Bax, R.; Bywater, R.; Cornaglia, G.; Goossens, H.; Hunter, P.; Isham, V.; Jarlier, V.; Jones, R.; Phillips, I.; Sahm, D.; Senn, S.; Struelens, M.; Taylor, D.; White, A. (2001). "Surveillance of antimicrobial resistance-what, how and whither?". Clinical Microbiology and Infection 7 (6): 316–325. doi:10.1046/j.1198-743x.2001.00239.x. PMID 11442565.
  44. Antibiotic Resistance: Agencies Have Made Limited Progress Addressing Antibiotic Use in Animals, U.S. Government Accountability Office, 7 September 2011, retrieved 27 August 2013
  45. 1 2 Baragona, Steve (12 May 2010). "Use of Antibiotics in Livestock Debated". voanews.com. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  46. Wegener, H. C. (2003). "Antibiotics in animal feed and their role in resistance development". Current Opinion in Microbiology 6 (5): 439–445. doi:10.1016/j.mib.2003.09.009. PMID 14572534.
  47. Knox, Richard (21 February 2012). "How Using Antibiotics in Animal Feed Creates Superbugs". npr.org. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  48. Carlet, J.; Jarlier, V.; Harbarth, S.; Voss, A.; Goossens, H.; Pittet, D.; Participants of the 3rd World Healthcare-Associated Infections Forum (2012). "Ready for a world without antibiotics? The Pensières Antibiotic Resistance Call to Action". Antimicrobial Resistance and Infection Control 1 (1): 11. doi:10.1186/2047-2994-1-11. PMC 3436635. PMID 22958833.
  49. Vieira, A. R.; Collignon, P.; Aarestrup, F. M.; McEwen, S. A.; Hendriksen, R. S.; Hald, T.; Wegener, H. C. (2011). "Association Between Antimicrobial Resistance inEscherichia coliIsolates from Food Animals and Blood Stream Isolates from Humans in Europe: An Ecological Study". Foodborne Pathogens and Disease 8 (12): 1295–1301. doi:10.1089/fpd.2011.0950. PMID 21883007.
  50. Zhang, S. (2013). "Pig-manure fertilizer linked to human MRSA infections". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2013.13752.
  51. European Commission (22 December 2005). "EUROPA – PRESS RELEASES – Press release – Ban on antibiotics as growth promoters in animal feed enters into effect". europa.eu. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  52. "Meat Without Drugs". Consumers Union. Retrieved 27 August 2013., which is described in the following works
  53. Rogers, Laura (28 December 2012). "Laura Rogers: A New Year's Resolution: Put Animals on an Antibiotics Diet". huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  54. Wallinga, David (12 February 2013). "David Wallinga, M.D.: Animal Antibiotic Use Continues Upwards, FDA Keeps Blinders on". huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  55. Philpott, Tom (17 Sep 2010). "UPDATED: With the food safety bill dead, time for the FDA/USDA to grow some backbone". Grist. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  56. John Gever (23 March 2012). "FDA Told to Move on Antibiotic Use in Livestock". MedPage Today. Retrieved 24 March 2012.
  57. Gardiner Harris (11 April 2012). "U.S. Tightens Rules on Antibiotics Use for Livestock". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  58. "FDA's Strategy on Antimicrobial Resistance – Questions and Answers". U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 11 April 2012. Retrieved 12 April 2012. “Judicious use” is using an antimicrobial drug appropriately and only when necessary; Based on a thorough review of the available scientific information, FDA recommends that use of medically important antimicrobial drugs in food-producing animals be limited to situations where the use of these drugs is necessary for ensuring animal health, and their use includes veterinary oversight or consultation. FDA believes that using medically important antimicrobial drugs to increase production in food-producing animals is not a judicious use.
  59. Stephanie Strom (July 31, 2015). "Perdue Sharply Cuts Antibiotic Use in Chickens and Jabs at Its Rivals". The New York Times. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  60. "Antibiotics Position Statement". Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  61. Salamon, Maureen (11 February 2013). "China's Overuse of Antibiotics in Livestock May Threaten Human Health". health.usnews.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  62. Thacker, Teena (13 April 2011). "Govt wants to limit use of antibiotics in animals – Indian Express". indianexpress.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  63. Sinha, Kounteya (25 November 2011). "New norm to curb antibiotic resistance – Times of India". indiatimes.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  64. Sinha, Kounteya (6 April 2012). "In a first, antibiotics bar on food-producing animals – Times of India". indiatimes.com. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  65. "Centre For Science and Environment (CSE)". Centre for Science and Environment (CSE). 30 July 2014. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  66. Pereira, M. S. V.; Siqueira-Júnior, J. P. (1995). "Antimicrobial drug resistance in Staphylococcus aureus isolated from cattle in Brazil". Letters in Applied Microbiology 20 (6): 391–395. doi:10.1111/j.1472-765X.1995.tb01328.x. PMID 7786507.
  67. Kim, Woo Joo; Park, Seung Chull (1998). "bacterial Resistance to Antimicrobial Agents: An Overview from Korea" (PDF). Yonsei Medical Journal 39 (6): 488–494. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  68. Won-sup, Yoon (25 June 2007). "Antibiotics in Livestock Harm Human Beings". The Korea Times. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  69. Flynn, Dan (7 June 2011). "South Korea Bans Antibiotics in Animal Feed". foodsafetynews.com. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  70. staff (7 January 1999). "NZ holds off ban on animal antibiotics – National – NZ Herald News". nzherald.co.nz. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  71. Williams, Robyn; Cook, Greg (11 August 2007). "Antibiotics and intensive chicken farming in New Zealand – The Science Show". abc.net.au. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  72. 1 2 Allen H. K., Trachsel J., Looft T., Casey T. A. (2014). Finding alternatives to antibiotics. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1323: 91-100. PMID 24953233
  73. Hume, M. E. (2011). Historic perspective: Prebiotics, probiotics, and other alternatives to antibiotics. Poultry Science 90 (11): 2663-9. PMID 22010256
  74. Griggs, J. P., Jacob, J. P. (2005) Alternatives to Antibiotics for Organic Poultry Production Poultry Science 14: 750-756.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, May 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.