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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: From Farm to Fork: Scientific Alliance Calls for More Stringent Policy on Antibiotic Use in Agriculture WASHINGTON DC, May 9, 2002 - Antibiotic use in agriculture contributes to increasing antibiotic resistance in bacteria carried by humans, says a panel of scientific experts tasked with evaluating the transfer of antibiotic-resistant bacteria from farm animals and the ecosystem. In a new report initiated by the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics (APUA), and published in the medical journal Clinical Infectious Diseases released on-line today on the APUA web site (www.APUA.org), the panel calls for immediate action by government and the agriculture industry to reduce the human health risks identified in the report. The panel recommends elimination of antibiotic use for growth promotion and limiting farm use of critically important drugs needed for hard-to-treat human infections, such as fluoroquinolones and third generation cephalosporins. Furthermore, the panel suggested, regulatory agencies should provide for rapid review of alternatives to antibiotics, and, where possible, changes in management, use of probiotics or competitive exclusion products, and vaccines should be encouraged. The APUA report, called 'The Need to Improve Antimicrobial Use in Agriculture,' is the first to provide a detailed review of both the environmental and human health impacts of antibiotic use on the farm. A multidisciplinary panel of national scientific experts met over an 18-month period and assessed approximately 500 published studies. "Based on the panel's extensive evaluation of the evidence, we have found that the use of antibiotics in food animals is contributing to the growing problem of antibiotic resistance in human infections and must be addressed on an urgent basis," said Sherwood Gorbach, MD, co-chair of the panel and a nationally known infectious disease physician based at the New England Medical Center. Findings
Show Health Risk from Environmental Dissemination In the United States, the veterinary community, public health officials and the farming industry began confronting the problem in the early 1990's to address the agriculture-based spread of antibiotic resistance, and recent data indicate that these initial efforts have helped. However, even though efforts are continuing, resistant bacteria are resourceful survivors and will not be overcome by the measures currently in place. To enhance the effectiveness of current control measures, the panel recommends stopping over-the-counter sale of certain antibiotics in agriculture and requiring a veterinary prescription when antibiotics are to be administered to food animals. "There is a critical need for more timely action to ensure that antibiotics remain effective," noted Stuart B. Levy, MD, President of APUA, which sponsored the study. "Once the resistance in a bacterial population reaches a certain level, reversal becomes extremely difficult." Medical
and Agricultural Overuse - A Risky Combination Powerful
New Scientific Techniques Provide New Evidence "The European Union already has taken bold steps to eliminate all use of antibiotics for growth promotion in animal husbandry," said John Bailar, MD, PhD, Professor and biostatistician from the University of Chicago, who served on the panel. Regardless of the debate and current practice, all uses of antibiotics in animals, agriculture and humans, on a global scale, contribute to the development of resistant bacteria. It is incumbent upon relevant professional societies and all concerned individuals to foster more appropriate use of antibiotics in order to preserve their effectiveness. About
the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics Interviews
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