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Media Coverage

''Superbugs''


"Since the 1950s, most American food animals have been routinely dosed with antibiotics, through their feed and water, in order to hasten their maturation and prevent disease from spreading in the close quarters of factory farms. According to the FDA, 80 percent of all antibiotics sold in this country are administered to livestock, most of them healthy. On a life-long, low dosage of (mainly) tetracyclines and penicillins—two classes of antibiotics central to treating infections in humans—these animals have become incubators for new strains of bacteria that can co-exist with these antibiotics. Increasingly, the medicine that used to work on people no longer does; in other words, we have drug-resistant superbugs.

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Last month, the Pew Charitable Trusts, whose Health Group has been studying the issue, sent representatives to Washington to thank the bill’s sponsors and lobby for closing the gaps in the F.D.A. guidelines. The group, Supermoms Against Superbugs, included pediatricians, farmers, and parents whose children had been sickened by or died from diseases like M.R.S.A. and salmonella."

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