
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/18/opinion/18tue3.html?ex=1190779200&en=cdca9215ce8bd5d2&ei=5070&emc=eta1
September 18, 2007
Editorial
Antibiotic Runoff
One
of the persistent problems of industrial agriculture is the inappropriate use
of antibiotics. It’s one thing to give antibiotics to individual animals,
case by case, the way we treat humans. But it’s a common practice in the
confinement hog industry to give antibiotics to the whole herd, to enhance
growth and to fight off the risk of disease, which is increased by keeping so
many animals in such close quarters. This is an ideal way to create organisms
resistant to the drugs. That poses a risk to us all.
A recent study by the University of Illinois makes the risk even more
apparent. Studying the groundwater around two confinement hog farms, scientists
have identified the presence of several transferable genes that confer
antibiotic resistance, specifically to tetracycline. There is the very real
chance that in such a rich bacterial soup these genes might move from organism
to organism, carrying the ability to resist tetracycline with them. And because
the resistant genes were found in groundwater, they are already at large in the
environment.
There are two
interdependent solutions to this problem, and hog producers should embrace them
both. The first solution — the least likely to be acceptable in the hog
industry — is to ban the wholesale, herdwide use of antibiotics. The
second solution is to continue to tighten the regulations and the monitoring of
manure containment systems. The trouble, of course, is that there is no such
thing as perfect containment.
The consumer has the
choice to buy pork that doesn’t come from factory farms. The
justification for that kind of farming has always been efficiency, and yet, as
so often happens in agriculture, the argument breaks down once you look at all
the side effects. The trouble with factory farms is that they are raising more
than pigs. They are raising drug-resistant bugs as well.
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