U.S. livestock producers are bracing for the strongest guidelines yet from the Food and Drug Administration on curtailing the use of antibiotics that the agency calls a threat to human health, according to The New York Times.
Dispensing antibiotics to healthy animals is a routine practice on large farms, but the new guidelines would halt use of the drugs solely to promote faster growth, and call for stronger oversight by veterinarians.
Scientists and health experts are calling the rules too weak. They say the use of antibiotics in livestock contributes to the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, as well as resistant types of salmonella and other microbes. Meanwhile, livestock producers claim a link between antibiotic use and human illness has not been established.
The agency is expected to release the final version of the new guidelines within months.
Several groups, including the American Medical Association and the Infectious Diseases Society of America, are pushing for stronger rules through a bill gaining support in Congress.


