I figured this was notable for the ag sector. I think there will be a lot of pressure in the next few years to limit routine antibiotic treatment in confinement operations. The odds are pretty good that a number of antibiotic resistant bacteria will develop, so some action needs to be taken.A growing weight of research links routine antibiotic use on factory farms to the rise in antibiotic-resistant bacteria -- which are showing up in more and more places worldwide (including, according to recent studies, in your local supermarket). Doctor groups, from the American Medical Association to the American Society of Microbiology, have appealed to the government and industry to restrict the practice, lest critical antibiotics become useless for human treatments.Over the past couple of years, the FDA changed its tune and has finally begun to respond to the threat. Top officials at the FDA have testified of the dangers to Congress. The agency itself is developing "voluntary guidance" that would restrict the practice -- which currently sees 80 percent of all antibiotics used in this country given to food animals.Sadly, though, the FDA is still whistling when it should be belting its song to the rafters. In fact, the meat industry has successfully resisted, and in the case of the antibiotic Cephalosporin, turned back via "midnight regulations" by outgoing Bush administration FDA officials, specific measures meant to address this threat to public health.As a result, a coalition of environmental groups including the Center for Science in the Public Interest, Food Animal Concerns Trust, Public Citizen, Union of Concerned Scientists, and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) has decided to sue.
Friday, May 27, 2011
Naked Capitalism Link of the Day
Today's link: Groups sue FDA to stop Big Ag antibiotic abuse-and it just might work, at Grist:
Labels:
Ag economy,
Ag news,
Naked Capitalism
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