The Guardian (USA)

Alarm at rise in seizures of illegal veterinary drugs at UK borders

- Robyn Vinter

The government has been urged to open an investigat­ion into illegal imports of veterinary drugs, after the number seized at the UK border increased dramatical­ly last year.

The Veterinary Medicines Directorat­e, the executive agency that regulates animal drugs, seized more than 40 different illegal medicines in the year to March 2021, compared with just one in 2019, one in 2018 and three in 2017.

Many of the packages were addressed to residentia­l premises and came from as far afield as Australia, India, South Africa and Thailand. Some contained enough medicine for hundreds of doses.

It is an offence to import veterinary medicines without a licence in the UK and, while most of the medicines seized by border officials were not banned substances, many were prescripti­on drugs that could provide a public health danger if not used responsibl­y.

Among the drugs seized were hormones, steroids and a number of different antibiotic­s intended for use on a wide range of animals, including dogs, horses, pigeons and food-producing animals.

Cóilín Nunan, scientific adviser to the Alliance to Save Our Antibiotic­s, a body made up of health and food organisati­ons aiming to tackle antibiotic resistance, said it has been clear for years that illegal imports were happening but the true scale is still not known.

He said: “Illegal imports are a concern, particular­ly if this means that antibiotic­s are being imported and used without a veterinary prescripti­on. It’s particular­ly irresponsi­ble to be importing high-priority critically important antibiotic­s illegally, or to be importing drugs that are banned from all veterinary use in the UK.”

The numbers seized are extremely small in comparison with the total number of veterinary drugs prescribed in the UK, but as some were uncovered during routine “spot checks”, there is no way of knowing how many illegal medicines are slipping through border controls.

Nunan added: “If The Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has evidence that illegal imports of veterinary drugs are increasing, they should launch an investigat­ion to determine the scale of the problem and to find out why this is happening, and how it can be stopped.”

One of the packages seized in 2017 contained enrofloxac­in, not itself used in human medicine, but a class of antibiotic­s listed as high-priority critically important in human medicine.

The antibiotic, which is part of the fluoroquin­olone family, is licensed for use in poultry in the UK, but a voluntary ban has been in place across the industry since 2016, though it is still widely available in other parts of the world.

A package seized in June last year contained doxycyclin­e, another antibiotic that vets are avoiding prescribin­g where possible, to help tackle antibiotic resistance.

The British Veterinary Associatio­n president, James Russell, said even one medicine brought into the UK illegally is “one too many”.

“These are the high-priority critically important antimicrob­ials. We as a veterinary profession are working so hard to move away from those, and to protect those for human health.

“Antimicrob­ial resistance is a growing threat, and left unchecked could be one of the biggest threats to humanity by 2050. There’s a key role of veterinary surgeons, not just in the UK but everywhere, which is being the gatekeeper­s and the custodians of medicines, and we do that through responsibl­e prescribin­g.”

Some drugs are more tightly restricted in food-producing animals to avoid them entering the human food chain. In some cases animals, for example milking cows, need to be taken out of the food chain while being treated – something that is usually tightly monitored by farmers and vets.

Defra denied there had been a rise in the amount of illegal veterinary medicines entering the UK and said the rise in seizures was down to a closer working relationsh­ip between the Veterinary Medicines Directorat­e and Border Force.

A Veterinary Medicines Directorat­e spokespers­on said: “We work closely with the UK’s Border Force to ensure illegal veterinary medicines don’t enter the country. This includes briefing operationa­l hubs across the UK to help them to better identify and seize illegal veterinary medicines at the border.

“It is this close working relationsh­ip that has led to a rise in the number of illegal veterinary medicines seized, and we continue to work hard alongside them to stamp out such criminal practices.”

Border Force said it was determined to crack down on illegal imports, and that officers were highly trained to detect smuggling.

It would not comment on the effectiven­ess of its spot checks or clarify how packages were inspected, citing security, but it said most checks were conducted according to risk levels or intelligen­ce.

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 ?? Photograph: Dpa Picture Alliance/Alamy ?? A vet checks through her drug supplies on a farm visit. There has been a sharp rise in seizuresof veterinary medicines being brought into the country illegally.
Photograph: Dpa Picture Alliance/Alamy A vet checks through her drug supplies on a farm visit. There has been a sharp rise in seizuresof veterinary medicines being brought into the country illegally.

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