NCBA urges Congress to look at science of antibiotics

Cattle producers are trying to educate Congress about the use of antibiotics in the beef industry.

Michael Apley, a Kansas State University veterinary clinical pharmacologist, recently went to Washington, D.C., with National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) representatives to address the issue.

They met with Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., and Rep. Leonard Boswell, D-Iowa, to discuss H.R. 1549, Slaughter’s bill to ban the use of antibiotics in livestock.

“I’m encouraged by her (Slaughter’s) willingness to sit down for an open discussion and that she has extended an offer for us to be involved in the discussions moving forward,” Apley said in a news release.

“As a veterinary clinical pharmacologist, I work to evaluate the benefits and risks of use of antibiotics in livestock. It’s extremely important that data-driven review and analysis be the guiding force behind every decision that affects the care of our animals and the safety of the food we eat.”

Boswell, who also has concerns about H.R. 1549, was part of a recent congressional-delegation trip to Denmark to examine how an antibiotics ban affected that nation’s swine population.

“In Denmark, we heard from farmers who saw increased mortality and illness, in addition to higher production costs, soon after the ban was put in place,” Boswell said. “In fact, many small Danish farmers who raised pigs went out of business after the ban. Only the farmers who could afford to implement the ban did survive the transition.”

In addition to the meeting with Slaughter and Boswell, the NCBA held a congressional briefing for staff, during which Apley discussed the judicious use of antibiotics in the beef industry as a tool used to raise healthy cattle.

The briefing was part of the NCBA’s ongoing “Beef 101” series to educate policy-makers about the beef production process.

“Unfortunately, there are a lot of misconceptions and outright misrepresentations out there about why and how antibiotics are used in the cattle industry,”said Apley. “The truth is, cattle producers and veterinarians utilize many tools including vaccines, herd health management, genetics and animal nutrition to avoid the need for antibiotics.

“They must adhere to strict, science-based guidelines in the use of antibiotics to treat, prevent, and control disease in livestock. These antibiotics have passed a stringent FDA-approval process, which has demonstrated they are safe and effective.”

Apley works with veterinarians throughout the United States concerning the use of medicine in food animals and also in the area of beef cattle-health.

“Prevention of disease is a cornerstone in both human and animal medicine,”Apley said.

“Veterinarians and producers are intent on fulfilling their obligations to both human and animal health, and our current regulatory process provides methodologies for further evaluating the use of antibiotics in food animals. It would be a tragedy to lose any valuable tools for preventing animal disease without substantial evidence for a benefit to human health.”

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