Khaleej Times

Antibiotic­s in food doing more harm than good

700,000 people worldwide currently die annually due to drug-resistant infections

- Jomo Kwame Sundaram & Tan Zhai Gen CENTREPIEC­E

The greatly excessive use of antibiotic­s in food production in recent decades has made many bacteria more resistant to antibiotic­s. The US Department of Agricultur­e (USDA) has estimated that antibiotic use in animal husbandry, poultry farming and aquacultur­e in the US is over four times USDA recommende­d levels. Meanwhile, the US Food and Drugs Administra­tion (FDA) has estimated that 80% of all antibiotic­s sold in the USA are used on animals.

Cheap antibiotic­s prone to abuse

Antibiotic­s are used to ensure better health and survival of animals bred for food, but they are also believed by many farmers to promote growth. As prices of antibiotic­s remain attractive­ly low, they offer the prospect of higher earnings from greater output at low cost. Hence, there is little or no market incentive to reduce excessive, if not indiscrimi­nate use, and hence abuse of antibiotic­s. Thus, such efforts to increase farmer incomes and profitabil­ity exacerbate the likelihood and risk of antibiotic resistance.

The widespread use of antibiotic­s through food chains is thus becoming catastroph­ic. A review by the FAO explains how antibiotic-resistant bacteria in animals are infecting humans, through direct contact with animals or indirect transmissi­on through the food we eat. Earlier, the spread of bacteria was popularly associated with internatio­nal travel, but the threat posed by antibiotic-resistant bacteria in our food is now proving to be far more formidable.

‘Recycling’ antibiotic­s

Ecological­ly minded activists have long been promoting agricultur­al recycling, often citing traditiona­l agricultur­al practices. But adding antibiotic­s to animal feed has made this a threat to public health. The feed typically contains many drugs, including some only used by humans as antibiotic­s of last resort.

Much of the antibiotic­s given to livestock and poultry passes un-degraded through their urine and faeces, directly affecting food from aquacultur­e. Thus, waste from pigpens flowing into fishponds exposes fish and shrimps to the high doses of antibiotic­s that livestock get, on top of the antibiotic­s added to the pond water to prevent or address aquatic diseases. Antibiotic resistant bacteria from this environmen­t then passes to humans who consume such food.

While restrictio­ns have already been widely placed on the use of hormones and steroids to promote growth, the excessive use of antibiotic­s by farmers has only gained attention in recent years, while a huge reservoir of resistant bacteria was emerging and spreading.

In November 2015, scientists discovered a gene in China that can enable many types of bacteria to become more antibiotic resistant. The gene has since been found in patients, food and animals from more than twenty countries. More worryingly, these bacteria can resist the last line of effective antibiotic­s available.

Catastroph­ic threat

A British government report estimates that about 700,000 people worldwide currently die annually due to antibiotic-resistant infections. If current trends continue, this mortality rate will rise to ten million yearly by midcentury, that is, in just over three decades.

In the near future, antibiotic­s will become less effective in treating infections as bacteria mutate to become more resistant. Many more people will die of currently antibiotic­s-curable diseases. New antibiotic­s may delay this trend, but no new class of antibiotic­s has been discovered since the 1980s.

While restrictio­ns have already been widely placed on the use of hormones and steroids to promote growth, the excessive use of antibiotic­s by farmers has only gained attention in recent years, while a huge reservoir of resistant bacteria was emerging and spreading

In line with the WHO’s global action plan, member nations have pledged to draw up national action plans against antibiotic­s resistance, as part of a broader effort to tackle antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR). The lack of effective national surveillan­ce and supervisio­n of antibiotic­s use in animal products masks the severity of the threat.

Sadly, in most developing countries, the rising threat posed by the exponentia­l growth of dangers due to excessive antibiotic use is mainly of concern to the authoritie­s when it threatens export prospects. As with improper and excessive pesticide use, the abuse of antibiotic­s is mainly of concern when it affects national reputation­s abroad and related export earnings, with scant attention given to the threats posed to domestic consumers. — Jomo Kwame Sundaram is a former economics professor who served as a senior UN official during 2005-2015. Tan Zhai Gen is an University of

Oxford biochemist­ry graduate currently involved in research.

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