This year marks a decade since a committee under Professor (now
Sir) Michael Swann advised the British government to curb the then
wholesale, indiscriminate use of antibiotics in agriculture. This
committee was established because of amply evidenced claims that
the inclusion of potent antimicrobial drugs in feedstuffs for pigs,
poultry and other livestock (to promote growth and prevent disease)
had encouraged the emergence of bacteria resistant to those agents
and capable of causing human gastrointestinal disease. Salmonella
typhimurium. a food poisoner of man and farm animals, caused particular
concern because of its increasing invulnerability to antibiotics,
The government took the Swann committee’s advice and brought
in restrictions. In particular, feedstuff manufacturers could no
longer put penicillins and tetracyclines in their products; these
antibiotics would be given to livestock in future only by veterinary
prescription, for the treatment of disease rather than to preven
outbreaks - something which can be achieved far more satisfactorily
by the wider use of improved methods of husbandry.
A decade later, we have witnessed
a massive increase in drug resistance among salmonellae in the UK
(with a particularly disquieting spread of multiply resistant strains
in the past two years, New Scientist, vol 80 p 90). There has been
continued squabbling between bacteriologists, the drug industry,
and the medical profession as to how much of this burden of resistance
is attributable to the use of such drugs in animal husbandry. And,
in the United States, an aggressive and interminable debate on the
subject has so far allowed the industry lobby to neutralise the
Food and Drug Administration's efforts to take positive steps to
deal with what has in recent years become a serious public health
hazard.
Against this background, two
items in the current issue of the Veterinary Record (vol 104, p
513 and 511) make salutory reading. The first is a report of a recent
case in which an animal feedstuff company was fined £5,850
for illegally incorporating penicillin, chlortetracycline and sulphadimidine
into their products. The second is a leading article warning
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veterinarians
of the considerable difficulties posed by drug resistance and urging
them to “think more critically” before prescribing any
drugs of this sort.
“Events of the last couple of years indicate that it may not
be purely alarmist science fiction to suggest that we could be considerably
nearer to a return to the therapeutic days status of the pre-M&B
693 days of the early 1930s than we realise” the article says.
It was in just such terms that Professor E.S. Anderson and others
directed public attention to the problem well over a decade ago,
and called for vigorous measures to turn the tide. What has gone
wrong?
The agricultural antibiotics
market in Britain is worth £20 million a year, so it is unsurprising
that the industry has not been enthusiastic, at any stage, about
measures likely to threaten its sales. Even self-interest has not
induced the drug companies to take more interest in the fate of
their products - products which, should the present growth of resistance
continue, may well prove to be useless and therefore unused in another
decade. Further down the line, the two Veterinary Record items show,
illicitly use of antibiotics does go on (an idea always fiercely
resented when this subject is raised publicly) and veterinarians
unfortunately need reminding of their responsibilities in the matter.
Antimicrobial drugs should be administered only to treat an identified
outbreak of disease; they should not be procured in large quantities
on prescription, from an absentee vet, who then leaves their use
to the farmer.
But hard information is hard
to come by. The data we do have - and lots of them - relate to the
epidemic spread of drug resistance, particularly the transmissible
type. It is important that we continue to monitor this dismal picture.
Just as necessary now, however, are measures instigated by the Ministry
of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food to monitor the spread of antibiotics
themselves, to show how they are being deployed on the farm and
in what quantities. The very existence of such machinery might make
a considerable impact on the pattern of drug use, and could hardly
fail to be beneficial.
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