High-End Human Drugs Fed to Livestock

High-End Human Drugs Fed to Livestock

A recent story in TIME magazine highlights a growing issue in our food system: the use of high-end human drugs in livestock animals.

After Chinese chicken farmers were found to be giving the antiviral human drug Tamiflu to chickens in 2005 to treat and prevent the spread of the avian flu (H5N1), it was discovered that chickens could still spread the virus, even if they were not showing any symptoms. Further, the overuse of Tamiflu quickly decreased its effectiveness and the virus soon developed a resistance.

According to TIME, a recent study appearing in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds that China is still heavily relying on drugs for other reasons as well: "just as happened with the overuse of Tamiflu, China’s animal drug addiction is leading to increasing antibiotic resistance, which in turn could lead to serious problems for people who depend on those drugs to fight infections."

The World Health Organization has already warned that we're at the brink of entering a "post-antibiotic era" as the excessive use in livestock has become common practice. In the U.S. alone, more than 29 million pounds—80 percent of the nation's antibiotic supplies—are being fed to animals to prevent and treat infection. And, like China, the antibiotics are also being used to promote faster animal growth.

In the recent study, researchers actually sifted through Chinese pig waste to look for traces of antibiotics and antibiotic-resistant bacteria left behind by the animals. According to TIME, the researchers counted "149 unique antibiotic-resistant genes, some at levels 192 to 28,000 times higher than control samples. Since the manure is often sold as fertilizer or washes downstream into rivers, those antibiotic-resistant genes can spread to other forms of bacteria, decreasing the overall effectiveness of the drugs in human beings."

NATURALLY SAVVY NEWSLETTER
Get the latest information, tips & recipes for healthy living delivered directly to your inbox.
Your privacy is important to us.

Antibiotic-resistant pathogens means more aggressive treatment for diseases; and some of those drugs have much more severe side effects than traditional antibiotics. The WHO said that we could see minor injuries, such as a scraped knee, leading to death because of the inability to treat such superficial infections.

But, "There’s some hope," writes Bryan Walsh for TIME, "last year the FDA issued draft guidelines that would ask the pharmaceutical industry to change labeling and marketing practices so that antibiotics would be used only on sick animals, rather than for growth promotion on healthy ones. But even those guidelines would only be voluntary. In China and in the U.S., drugs are likely to remain a part of commercial meat production — and the rest of us may pay the price."

Photo credit: Denzil

Leave a Comment

Andrea Donsky, RHN
Andrea Donsky, B. COMM is an international TV Health Expert, Best Selling Author, Nutritionist Podcast Host, and Founder of NaturallySavvy.com—a recipient of Healthline’s Best Healthy Living Blogs for 2019. As a pioneer and visionary in the health food industry, Andrea’s passion is to inspire people to make healthier choices. Andrea has combined her background and expertise as both a Registered Holistic Nutritionist and an entrepreneur ("She Boss!") to educate the public on living a healthy lifestyle through the creation of her businesses, books, articles, podcasts, videos, talks, and TV and radio media appearances. Andrea founded Naturally Savvy Media Inc. in 2007 in order to share her passion for healthy living, and love for natural products and companies. Among her numerous publications, Andrea co-authored Unjunk your Junk Food published by Simon and Schuster, a book that journalist, author and mother Maria Shriver endorsed: “Unjunk Your Junk Food has certainly made me more aware about the food that my children eat and the effects it has on our body and mind."</P. Andrea also co-authored two e-books entitled Label Lessons: Your Guide To A Healthy Shopping Cart, and Label Lessons: Unjunk Your Kid’s Lunch Box.