Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY), Congress's only microbiologist,said late today that she plans shortly to reintroduce PAMTA, the Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act, a timely move given the collapsing antibiotic market (see this morning's post) and continuing reports of resistance moving off farms (as in this post).
PAMTA would direct the FDA to re-examine its approvals of veterinary antibiotics that are close analogs of ones used in humans, because they can stimulate the development of resistant organisms. When those organisms move off the farm, as research shows they do, they then cause illnesses that cannot be treated by the functionally identical human drugs.
The Union of Concerned Scientists said in 2008 about an earlier version of the bill:
Parenthetically, it is flattering to see Slaughter reference new data on the amount of antibiotics used in animals in the United States — almost 29 million pounds — and the percentage of the total market antibiotic market that represents: 80 percent. Those pieces of news were broken over the Congressional break by myself, here at SUPERBUG, and by Ralph Loglisci at the blog of the Center for a Livable Future.
