Antibiotic Resistance in Poultry Revisited by Media Reports

GLOBAL - A new report from Zoetis explores the latest developments on antibiotic use in livestock and poultry production.
calendar icon 2 June 2014
clock icon 2 minute read

Following the April 2014 World Health Organization (WHO) report warning of a 'post-antibiotic era', Current Biology published the findings of a new study on 19 May, reports Influence Feed.

The study confirmed WHO findings and revealed “diverse and abundant antibiotic resistance genes in nonclinical environments ... that ... are not randomly distributed among different environments”.

The NRDC, Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics, Consumers Union and food journalist, Mark Bittman directed more than half a million followers to coverage in The Washington Post via Twitter.

In an effort to curb consumer sentiment that antibiotic use in animal agriculture is contributing to antibiotic resistance, the American Meat Institute (AMI) addressed the results of a March 2014 Harris Poll consumer survey on the same subject.

According to the AMI survey, 39 per cent of respondents think antibiotics are present in meat and poultry and 18 per cent think antibiotics in livestock production is the No. 1 contributing factor to antibiotic resistance in humans.

In response to this survey, AMI released a brochure on 7 May that seeks to “counter the misperceptions,” as reported by Agri-Pulse.

Visit Influence Feed from Zoetis for more industry trends and insights from key opinion leaders.

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