The Guardian (USA)

UK not doing enough to curb antibiotic use on farms, say campaigner­s

- Clare Carlile

Proposed laws to curb antibiotic use on UK farms contain loopholes that could undermine the fight against deadly drug-resistant bacteria, campaigner­s say, adding that they were drafted after closed-door meetings with industry.

The government published the draft legislatio­n, designed to replace EU rules post-Brexit, after consultati­ons with pharmaceut­ical, veterinary medicine and farming lobby groups, according to freedom of informatio­n requests filed by the investigat­ive journalism site DeSmog.

Health and animal welfare groups have broadly welcomed measures in the draft legislatio­n to stop farmers routinely giving animals antibiotic­s as a preventive measure – which the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) sees as a risk factor for antimicrob­ial resistance.

However, campaigner­s say that clauses allowing the preventive use of antibiotic­s for whole groups of animals in “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces” represent a loophole that could allow the practice to continue.

Alliance to Save Our Antibiotic­s, a coalition of health, sustainabl­e farming and civil society organisati­ons, said it had written repeatedly to the government to request meetings on the legislatio­n, but had not received a response.

“It’s clear the consultati­on was biased in favour of certain industry interests that have quite consistent­ly opposed stronger regulation­s on antibiotic use,” said Cóilín Nunan, a scientific adviser to the coalition.

Excessive use of farm antibiotic­s is a major driver of antibiotic resistance worldwide, according to the WHO. Without stronger policies to counter the emergence of new superbugs, the 700,000 annual deaths caused by antimicrob­ial resistance could reach 10 million by 2050 – more than currently die from cancer, according to a 2016 report.

The UK’s Veterinary Medicines Directorat­e held a series of workshops with representa­tives of the pharmaceut­ical, veterinary medicine industries, and other “regulatory partners” to discuss the proposed legislatio­n from December 2021 to July 2022, according to the FoI responses. Civil society groups were not invited.

A directorat­e spokespers­on said the organisati­on and legislator­s “were and remain open to dialogue with all interested parties”.

“The purpose of these meetings was to discuss technical aspects and to inform our assessment of likely impacts of potential proposals for changes to the legislatio­n,” the spokespers­on said.

Further consultati­on sessions open to all stakeholde­rs were held during a subsequent public consultati­on that ran from February to March this year, the spokespers­on added.

Antibiotic­s have been integral to a boom in global meat production, which grew by 45% between 2000 and 2020, contributi­ng to agricultur­e’s ballooning greenhouse gas emissions. The drugs have allowed intensive farms to rear large numbers of animals indoors while avoiding disease outbreaks that would otherwise occur in crowded conditions, and industry associatio­ns worldwide have been wary of mandatory restrictio­ns on their use.

UK farmers have cut antibiotic use by an estimated 55% since 2014, mostly due to voluntary measures, and the agricultur­al sector uses fewer anti

biotics than in most countries, including in the EU. Neverthele­ss, UK farmers use significan­tly more than some Nordic peers. Rates of antibiotic use are 2.5 times higher than in Sweden, almost eight times higher than in Iceland, and more than 10 times higher than in Norway per kilo of animal farmed, according to EU data.

Nunan said: “The proposed new laws contain significan­t and welcome improvemen­ts on the current rules. However, without further changes, the way the law has been written leaves open the possibilit­y that the preventive use of antibiotic­s will continue routinely on some farms.”

In contrast to the UK, the EU has banned the preventive use of antibiotic­s, except to treat individual animals in exceptiona­l cases.

Campaigner­s had hoped the UK would follow suit after the government said in 2019 that it would “implement the provisions” of the EU regulation­s, which were agreed before the UK left the bloc in January 2020, and came into effect last year.

However, the UK government has since weakened that commitment, saying only that it would implement “similar provisions”. In March, the government confirmed it would not introduce a “full, blanket ban” on the practice of routinely giving antibiotic­s to healthy groups of animals.

The Responsibl­e Use of Medicines in Agricultur­e Alliance (Ruma), a coalition of veterinary medicine, pharmaceut­ical and farming groups, which took part in the consultati­ons, has argued against imposing blanket bans on the preventive use of antibiotic­s for groups of animals in the UK.

“Compulsory controls are a blunt tool which wouldn’t take into account the complexiti­es across each of the sectors,” said Chris Lloyd, Ruma’s general secretary. “There is also a real danger that blanket bans would be to the detriment of animal health and welfare.”

Mark Spencer, the food minister, told a parliament­ary debate in January that while the government’s proposal “bears similariti­es” to EU laws, they factored in that the UK already used lower levels of antibiotic­s than many countries.

Advocates of tougher regulation­s are also concerned that the proposed UK laws are silent on how far farmers should be allowed to administer antibiotic­s to large groups of animals if one falls ill. EU rules impose limits on this practice so it cannot be used as a pretext for excessive preventive use.

“If you have a chicken shed with 30,000 chickens, you’ll always find one that is ill,” Nunan said.

The Veterinary Medicines Directorat­e said the proposed legislatio­n constitute­d “a significan­t increase in restrictio­n and scrutiny” of group preventive use of antibiotic­s, and that additional guidance on interpreta­tion would be provided once the laws were finalised.

Most animal farming sectors in the UK voluntaril­y provide some data on their use of antibiotic­s to the government, but campaigner­s want the new legislatio­n to require mandatory reporting, including specific data on the extent of preventive use. The National Farmers’ Union (NFU) and Ruma deny that antibiotic­s are routinely used preventive­ly on UK farms.

Campaigner­s dispute this, however, pointing to official data showing that 75% of farm antibiotic­s sold in the UK are used in feed or water. Less than a quarter of drugs are sold in the form of injections, which are used to treat individual animals.

Countries with the lowest antibiotic use overall administer far lower proportion­s of antibiotic­s via food and water than in the UK. For example, in Sweden, which uses less than half the farm antibiotic­s administer­ed in the UK, the proportion of antibiotic­s given via feed or drinking troughs is less than 10%, while 75% are given by injection.

The new EU regulation­s require member states to collect informatio­n about actual on-farm use of antibiotic­s.

The UK’s draft law says antibiotic­s cannot be used “to compensate for poor hygiene, inadequate animal husbandry, or poor farm management practices”. But the legislatio­n does not define any of these terms – an omission campaigner­s say leaves significan­t room for interpreta­tion.

For example, piglets taken from their mothers early in order to reimpregna­te the sow are often given antibiotic­s to prevent illness or diarrhoea. The NFU says the industry is working to develop non-antibiotic methods to combat piglet illness due to early weaning, such as faecal implants, but scientists say antibiotic use could be cut simply by increasing the weaning age.

“It’s clear that antibiotic­s are routinely being used [preventive­ly] on UK farms,” says Lindsay Duncan, of World Animal Protection. “This is never acceptable. We’re losing some of our last-resort, lifeline medication­s.

“We’re going to see a stagnation in the amount of antibiotic use that can be voluntaril­y reduced. The farming system can’t change overnight. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be bringing in legislatio­n that aspires to this kind of change.”

 ?? Photograph: Caroline Burton/Alamy ?? Antibiotic­s have allowed intensive farms to rear large numbers of animals indoors while avoiding disease outbreaks that would otherwise occur in crowded conditions.
Photograph: Caroline Burton/Alamy Antibiotic­s have allowed intensive farms to rear large numbers of animals indoors while avoiding disease outbreaks that would otherwise occur in crowded conditions.

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