A number of professional organizations and governmental entities have taken stances on the use of antibiotics in agriculture.
Over 300
groups, including the American Medical Association
and the American Public Health Association, have endorsed
the Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act
of 2003, a bill that would phase out the routine feeding
of medically important antibiotics to healthy farm animals.
This year's bill is summarized here
, and additional policy statements are below. If your organization
would like to endorse, or would like more information, contact
Terri
Stiffler.
Ambulatory Pediatric Association
Policy
on Clinical and Environmental Factors Contributing to Antibiotic-Resistant
Bacteria, May-June 2002
Concludes that the inappropriate use of antibiotics in clinical medicine and in raising livestock contributes to the development and spread of antibiotic-resistant organisms; proposes to raise awareness among pediatricians, families, public health programs and policy-makers regarding the problem of environmental factors contributing to antibiotic resistance and to develop strategies to reduce or eliminate the further growth of antibiotic-resistant bacteria
American College of Preventive Medicine
Statement
on Use of Antimicrobials in Food Animals , March 2000
Recommends the discontinuation of antimicrobials used to
promote the growth of food animals if they are also used
in human medicine
American Medical Association
Resolution
508 - Antimicrobial Use and Resistance, Annual Meeting
2001
Opposes the use of antimicrobials at non-therapeutic levels
in agriculture; urges that non-therapeutic use in animals
of antimicrobials also used in humans be terminated or phased
out based on scientifically sound risk assessments
American Public Health Association
Interim
Policy, LB-00-5
Addressing the Use of Fluoroquinolone Antibiotics in Agriculture,
November 15, 2000
Supports the FDA’s proposed ban on use of fluoroquinolones
in poultry
Policy
Number 9908
Addressing the Problem of Bacterial Resistance to Antimicrobial
Agents and the Need for Surveillance, January 1, 1999
Urges the FDA to work for regulations eliminating the non-medical
use of antibiotics and limiting the use of antibiotics in
animal feeds
California Medical Association
Countering
Bacterial Resistance from Antimicrobial Overuse, March
2001
Opposes the use of antimicrobials used in human medicine at sub-therapeutic levels in agriculture; urges that agricultural use of antibiotics be limited to veterinary prescription
Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists
Position
Statement 1999-ID 7
Discontinuation of antimicrobials used to promote growth
of food animals if they are used in or select for cross
resistance to antimicrobials used in human therapy
Recommends the discontinuation of antimicrobials used to
promote the growth of food animals if they are also used
in human medicine
Infectious Diseases Society of America
Principles
and Strategies Intended to Limit the Impact of Antimicrobial
Resistance, August 2001. Supports "good antimicrobial
stewardship and improved hygience in food animals that promotes
animals health" and "better production methods and growth
promotion alternatives to replace the subtherapeutic use
of antimicrobial agents in food animals"
Minnesota Medical Association
Recommends
that the MMA oppose the use of antimicrobials used in
human medicine at less than therapeutic levels in agriculture,
or as pesticides or growth promoters
National Association of State Public Health Veterinarians,
Inc.
Position
Statement 1999-ID 7
Discontinuation of antimicrobials used to promote growth
of food animals if they are used in or select for cross
resistance to antimicrobials used in human therapy
Recommends the discontinuation of antimicrobials used to
promote the growth of food animals if they are also used
in human medicine
World Health Organization
Global
Principles for the Containment of Antimicrobial Resistance
in Animals Intended for Food, June 2000
Recommendations include termination or rapid phasing-out of the use of antimicrobials for growth promotion if they are also used for treatment of humans in the absence of a public health safety evaluation and obligatory prescriptions for all antimicrobials used for disease control in food animals
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Rev. 5/10/04