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Developing nations need robust support to reduce medicine use

Developing nations need robust support to reduce medicine use
Author: Jake Davies
Publish date: Saturday. August 11th, 2018

It can seem distinctly unfair to judge developing countries’ practices when it comes to the environment or use of fossil fuels. After all, the western world was able to freely exploit resources before science proved what harm they can cause.

Photo: Koos Groenewold

There’s an argument that it’s the same for antibiotic use in farms. Until relatively recently, there was little in the way of restriction on antibiotics use in many developed countries and their populations benefitted from the intensively produced protein that resulted. People no longer had to worry about where their next meal was coming from, so could focus on improving economic output.

As resistance levels have increased, however, regulations have tightened and, in many cases, farmers have successfully reduced their use of medicines sustainably.

But in less developed regions it is clear that there is still some work to do, after an investigation found the antibiotic colistin for sale without prescription in India. What’s more, the packaging reportedly advertised improved growth rates as a benefit of mixing the drug with poultry rations.

Colistin is considered critically important by the World Health Organization, and is the only drug left that can treat patients with carbapenem-resistant infections.

The medicines were bought by journalists working for UK news organisation the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. As part of the report it asked Timothy Walsh, professor of medical microbiology at Cardiff University, for his views on the matter – he suggested it was “complete and utter madness” to use the drug in poultry farming.

India’s ministry for health introduced limited restrictions to antibiotic use last year, and the International Poultry Council recently released a position paper on the subject that has some promising features. But, crucially, using the drugs as growth promotors was not formally banned by either.

While the argument about allowing developing countries to do so in their own time stands, there’s a real risk that good medicine stewardship in some regions will be totally undermined by low standards in others – after all, resistant bacteria does not respect borders.


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