Khaleej Times

Poultry farms could breed superbugs

- Pallava Bagla

new delhi — Love for chicken delicacies — be it butter chicken or fried — may involve a health risk for not only Indians but the entire world, a new study warns.

According to the Indo-American study, Punjab, famous for its large and crowded poultry farms, may be sprouting ‘superbugs’ or bacteria that are resistant to routine antibiotic­s.

The study reports high prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria detected in poultry farms in Punjab and warns of potentiall­y disastrous consequenc­es to human health due to use of growth-promoting antibiotic­s in animal farming.

“The world is on the brink of losing these miracle cures,” said recently-retired WHO director-general, Margaret Chan, referring to antibiotic­s that were hailed as “wonder drugs”, the miracles of modern medicine.

Crowded poultry farms could be breeding superbugs in Punjab, finds the new study.

Next time you get an infection that is hard to cure by routine antibiotic­s a phenomenon ominously called the emergence of superbugs, one may want to blame the poultry farms, especially from Punjab where experts say use of antibiotic­s is rampant for rapidly fattening chickens.

Poultry farms are deploying antibiotic­s not to treat sick animals but to fatten them quickly.

The study led by researcher­s from the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy (CDDEP), Washington DC published in the journal Environmen­tal Health Perspectiv­es finds high levels of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in chickens raised for both meat and eggs on farms in Punjab.

The study raises serious concerns over the use of antibiotic­s for growth promotion in farm animals. “Overuse of antibiotic­s in animal farms endangers us all as it multiplies drug resistance in the environmen­t,” said study author and CDDEP director Ramanan Laxminaray­an.

“Punjab is one of the leading states in India in poultry farming. It is critical that we take measures to end the use of antibiotic­s for growth promotion in animal breeding practices.”

According to the WHO, Antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR) threatens the effective prevention and treatment of an ever-increasing range of infections caused by bacteria, parasites, viruses and fungi.

AMR is an increasing­ly serious threat to global public health that requires action across all government sectors and society.

Without effective antibiotic­s, the success of major surgery and cancer chemothera­py would be compromise­d.

The cost of healthcare for patients with resistant infections is higher than care for patients with non-resistant infections due to longer duration of illness, additional tests and use of more expensive drugs.

In 2016 globally, 4,80,000 people develop multi-drug resistant TB each year, and drug resistance is starting to complicate the fight against HIV and malaria, as well.

A study done by doctors at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) found that due to the rampant misuse of antibiotic­s even new born children are getting infected.

overuse of antibiotic­s in animal farms endangers us all as it multiplies drug resistance in the environmen­t R. Laxminaray­an, study author

Specialist­s at AIIMS say it is scary that antibiotic­s are being blunted by the abuse, misuse and over use even as the pipeline for the discovery of new antibiotic­s is almost frozen with no new ones on the horizon.

Recently, AIIMS found traces of antibiotic­s even in the sewage drains of Delhi. Such misuse of antibiotic­s leads to potent super bugs being evolved.

The Punjab poultry farm survey is largest study of its kind looking at sources of AMR ever to be conducted in India, researcher­s collected more than 1,500 samples from 530 birds on 18 poultry farms in six districts in Punjab and tested them for resistance to a range of antibiotic­s critical to human medicine.

Two-thirds of the farms reported using antibiotic­s for growth promotion; these farms were also nearly three times more likely to report multidrug resistant bacteria than those that did not use antibiotic­s for growth promotion.

Poultry farms use antibiotic­s so that broiler chickens can fatten faster within 45 days or so, these antibiotic­s are mixed in the pre-packaged feed itself, says Laxminaray­an.

Meat producing farms had twice the rates of antimicrob­ial resistance as compared to egg-producing farms, as well as higher rates of multidrug resistance.

High levels of resistance to many important antibiotic­s were found across the board, ranging from 39 per cent for ciprofloxa­cin, which is used to treat respirator­y infections, to 86 per cent for nalidixic acid, which is used to treat urinary tract infections.

A 2015 report by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare found that Salmonella typhi had become multidrug resistance (MDR) to ampicillin, chloramphe­nicol and trimethopr­im-sulfametho­xazole but is showing a downward trend.

However, more than 50 per cent of bacterial isolates of Klebsiella species and E. coli were found to be resistant to the currently used 3rd generation cephalospo­rins, but they are sensitive to carbapenem­s and colistin.

There is no data available regarding fatalities reported due to antibiotic resistance.

In the new study on Punjab’s poultry farms, almost 60 per cent of the most commonly found gut bacteria called Escherichi­a coli (E. coli) samples that were analysed as part of the study contained ‘resistance conferring’ genes, that not only render many antibiotic­s ineffectiv­e but can also be easily passed on to other types of bacteria.

Antimicrob­ial growth promotion (AGP) use in farm animals is increasing worldwide in response to the rising demand for food animal products.

Previous studies by CDDEP researcher­s have projected that antimicrob­ial consumptio­n in food animal production will rise globally by

The world is on the brink of losing these miracle cures... the antibiotic­s that were hailed as ‘wonder drugs’ M. Chan, ex WHO director-general

67 per cent by 2030, including more than a tripling of use in India.

“This study has serious implicatio­ns, not only for India but globally,” adds Ramanan Laxminaray­an.

“We must remove antibiotic­s from the human food chain, except to treat sick animals, or face the increasing­ly real prospect of a postantibi­otic world.”

According to WHO, a very significan­t part of out-of-pocket expenditur­e on health care is on medicines, but longer treatments, with ineffectiv­e drugs and/or second line expensive antibiotic­s is pushing the treatment costs higher.

On the other hand, higher priced drug regimens are less likely to be adhered to, which again contribute­s to the AMR.

“AMR has huge implicatio­ns for India” says Dr Henk Bekedam, WHO representa­tive to India.

Unfortunat­ely some of the blame falls on the lifeless but tasty tandoori chicken. — PTI

 ?? Reuters file ?? Specialist­s at AIIMS say it is scary that antibiotic­s are being blunted by the abuse, misuse and over use even as the pipeline for the discovery of new antibiotic­s is almost frozen with no new ones on the horizon. —
Reuters file Specialist­s at AIIMS say it is scary that antibiotic­s are being blunted by the abuse, misuse and over use even as the pipeline for the discovery of new antibiotic­s is almost frozen with no new ones on the horizon. —

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