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Antibiotic Resistance PDF Print E-mail
Better Planet

Antibiotic use on the farm hurts human health-and it doesn't even help the
bottom line.

By Mary C. Pearl

Donald Ross, a poultry worker in Virginia, nicked his finger one day on the
job. The subsequent infection ballooned into a lesion so unresponsive to
antibiotics that it had to be surgically removed, according to a report in
the Baltimore Sun. Poultry workers spend their days feeding birds,
transporting and weighing them, and then hanging them on hooks,
slaughtering, and packing them. Often they do not wear gloves or protective
clothing while they do this messy work, and bird feathers and bits of fecal
matter can piggyback on their clothes and shoes. Chances are they bring home
dangerous bacteria, the kinds that are resistant to antibiotic treatment.

An estimated 70 percent of all antibiotics sold in the United States-more
than 24 million pounds every year-are used on farms, mostly in animal feed.
Health researchers have long worried that this heavy load of antibiotics is
causing strains of bacteria to evolve that are impervious to the drugs.
Farmers have justified their practice on the grounds that antibiotics help
fatten up the birds, thereby increasing profits. But a groundbreaking study
by Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health pulls the rug out from
under this argument.

Using data collected by Perdue poultry farms, Hopkins researchers calculated
that Perdue lost $.0093 per broiler chicken when using antibiotics. For each
dollar spent on antibiotic feed additives, the return was less than 10
cents. "We were surprised to find no measurable benefit and actually a
business loss," says Ellen Silbergeld, professor of environmental health
sciences at Johns Hopkins and one of the authors of the study. Julie
DeYoung, vice president for corporate communications at Perdue, claims the
data that Johns Hopkins examined were not designed to evaluate the economics
of antibiotic use. At the very least, though, the Hopkins study establishes
that feeding antibiotics to chickens in low, uncontrolled doses provides no
clear economic benefit.

So how did the poultry industry get hooked on drugs that are dangerous to
the health of both humans and companies? Blame an over-relianceon
conventional wisdom. In some studies from the 1950s, animals were found to
gain more weight faster when given low doses of antibiotics in their feed.
It is highly likely that other factors, like improved breeding, management,
and feed formulation, also played a role in spurring the growth of poultry .
Nevertheless, the vast majority of antibiotics used on farms today are added
to animal feed solely to stimulate growth.

The consequences are clear. The FDA estimates that about 70 percent of all
infection-causing bacteria have become resistant to at least one of the
drugs most commonly used to treat infections. Bacitracin, erythromycin,
neomycin, streptomycin, tetracycline, and more than 10 other antibiotics,
representing all the major classes of clinically important therapies
commonly used in human medicine, are approved by the FDAfor use in chickens
and turkeys. Quinupristin- dalfopristin was licensed for use on. farms in
advance of clinical approval. The result was that resistance to the drug
emerged even before it could be used to fight infectious disease in human
beings.

The story gets worse. Bacteria share DNA with other organisms with which
they come into contact, so an antibiotic-resistant gene can transfer from
one type of bacterium to another, and a bacterial cell can become resistant
to numerous antibiotics at once. Employees in the poultry industry typically
work without protective equipment in dusty spaces crowded with thousands of
birds; heavy antibiotic use in those conditions creates a paradise for the
emergence and spread of these multiantibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Poultry are already a leading source of Salmonella and Campylobacter
infections in humans. If a person ingests chicken contaminated with
Salmonella that is resistant to ciprofloxacin and amoxicillin, not only will
the Salmonella itself be difficult to treat, it will share its resistance
with other bacteria in a person's body. If the same person later comes down
with strep throat, ciprofloxacin and amoxicillin may be ineffective to treat
it.

Resistance to antibiotic cures for Campylobacter, Salmonella, and other
food-borne pathogens is increasing. Untreatable strains of Enterococcus and
Staphylococcus aureus in intensive care units are also on the rise. Over one
five-year period in the 1990s, the rate of penicillin resistance increased
by 300 percent, while cefotaxime resistance grew by more than 1,000 percent.
The annual cost of antimicrobial resistance in Staphylococcus alone has been
estimated at $122 million.

Unsafe for humans, a drain on health-care resources, and not even
profitable: It's time for companies like Perdueto kick the antibiotic habit
so we can all be better off..
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Discover Magazine, September 2007

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