Antibiotics and the Meat We Eat
By DAVID A.
KESSLER
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/28/opinion/antibiotics-and-the-meat-we-eat.html?_r=2&
Published: March 27, 2013
SCIENTISTS at the Food and Drug Administration
systematically monitor the meat and poultry sold in supermarkets around the
country for the presence of disease-causing bacteria that are resistant to
antibiotics. These food products are bellwethers that tell us how bad the crisis
of antibiotic resistance is getting. And they’re telling us it’s getting worse.
But this is only part of the story. While the F.D.A.
can see what kinds of antibiotic-resistant bacteria are coming out of livestock
facilities, the agency doesn’t know enough about the antibiotics that are being
fed to these animals. This is a major public health problem, because giving
healthy livestock these drugs breeds superbugs that can infect people. We need
to know more about the use of antibiotics in the production of our meat and
poultry. The results could be a matter of life and death.
In 2011, drugmakers sold nearly 30 million pounds of
antibiotics for livestock — the largest amount yet recorded and about 80 percent
of all reported antibiotic sales that year. The rest was for human health care.
We don’t know much more except that, rather than healing sick animals, these
drugs are often fed to animals at low levels to make them grow faster and to
suppress diseases that arise because they live in dangerously close quarters on
top of one another’s waste.
It may sound counterintuitive, but feeding antibiotics
to livestock at low levels may do the most harm. When he accepted the Nobel
Prize in 1945 for his discovery of penicillin, Alexander Fleming warned that
“there is the danger that the ignorant man may easily underdose himself and by
exposing his microbes to nonlethal quantities of the drug make them resistant.”
He probably could not have imagined that, one day, we would be doing this to
billions of animals in factorylike facilities.
The F.D.A. started testing retail meat and poultry for
antibiotic-resistant bacteria in 1996, shortly before my term as commissioner
ended. The agency’s most recent report on superbugs in our meat, released in
February and covering retail purchases in 2011, was 82 pages long and broke down
its results by four different kinds of meat and poultry products and dozens of
species and strains of bacteria.
It was not until 2008, however, that Congress required
companies to tell the F.D.A. the quantity of antibiotics they sold for use in
agriculture. The agency’s latest report, on 2011 sales and also released in
February, was just four pages long — including the cover and two pages of
boilerplate. There was no information on how these drugs were administered or to
which animals and why.
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. Unfortunately, the Senate
Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, as well as the F.D.A., is
aiding and abetting them.
The Senate committee recently approved the Animal Drug
User Fee Act, a bill that would authorize the F.D.A. to collect fees from
veterinary-drug makers to finance the agency’s review of their products. Public
health experts had urged the committee to require drug companies to provide more
detailed antibiotic sales data to the agency. Yet the F.D.A. stood by silently
as the committee declined to act, rejecting a modest proposal from Senators
Kirsten E. Gillibrand of New York and Dianne Feinstein of California, both
Democrats, that required the agency to report data it already collects but does
not disclose.
In the House, Representatives Henry A. Waxman of
California and Louise M. Slaughter of New York, also Democrats, have introduced
a more comprehensive measure. It would not only authorize the F.D.A. to collect
more detailed data from drug companies, but would also require food producers to
disclose how often they fed antibiotics to animals at low levels to make them
grow faster and to offset poor conditions.
This information would be particularly valuable to the
F.D.A., which asked drugmakers last April to voluntarily stop selling
antibiotics for these purposes. The agency has said it would mandate such action
if those practices persisted, but it has no data to determine whether the
voluntary policy is working. The House bill would remedy this situation, though
there are no Republican sponsors.
Combating resistance requires monitoring both the
prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in our food, as well as the use of
antibiotics on livestock. In human medicine, hospitals increasingly track
resistance rates and antibiotic prescription rates to understand how
the use of these drugs affects resistance. We need to cover both sides of this
equation in agriculture, too.
I appreciate that not every lawmaker is as convinced
as I am that feeding low-dose antibiotics to animals is a recipe for disaster.
But most, if not all of them, recognize that we are facing an antibiotic
resistance crisis, as evidenced by last year’s bipartisan passage of a measure
aimed at fighting superbugs by stimulating the development of new antibiotics
that treat serious infections. Why are lawmakers so reluctant to find out how 80
percent of our antibiotics are used?
We cannot avoid tough questions because we’re afraid
of the answers. Lawmakers must let the public know how the drugs they need to
stay well are being used to produce cheaper meat.
David
A. Kessler was commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration from 1990 to
1997.
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