Bacteria’s Ability To Resist Drugs An International Issue

Barbara Dickworth | The Western Producer | November 28, 2014

Global surveillance needed | Countries take action on antibiotic use

Global surveillance of antimicrobial resistant bacteria is needed because these bugs are on the move.  “Any country with antibiotic resistance is a global concern,” said Tom Chiller, who oversees diseases carried in food, water and the environment for the Centers for Disease Control in the United States.  He told an antimicrobial resistance conference in Atlanta, Georgia, that salmonella Kentucky has become increasingly resistant to drugs such as ceftiofur in Africa, Asia and Europe.

Problems were first noticed in Africa and then in turkey flocks in Europe. Scientists were able to discover the same resistant genetic line wherever that strain appeared.  The ability of disease-causing bacteria to fend off drugs has become an international problem in a world that could face a post-antibiotic era in which minor infections are more difficult to treat.  The World Health Organization, the World Organization for Animal Health and the Food and Agriculture Organization have agreed that international standards for testing and surveillance are needed to track and compare bacteria moving around the globe.

The connection between human health and antibiotic use to treat animals is not definitive, but many countries have already banned the use of antibiotics in feed for growth improvement as one way to control potential resistance patterns moving from farm to fork.  The United States wants antibiotics removed from livestock feed and water by 2016. These medications will then be available only through a veterinary prescription.  U.S. president Barack Obama signed an executive order earlier this year to address antimicrobial resistance...