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Friday, May 03, 2013

FDA CVM Director Responds To Bacteria In Meat Report

In a New York Times (4/24, Subscription Publication, 1.68M) letter-to-the editor, the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Veterinary Medicine Director Dr. Bernadette Dunham responds to an April 17 article “about the Environmental Working Group’s interpretation of government data on antimicrobial resistant bacteria in meat,” noting that the some data in the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System “may have limited direct medical relevance, and it’s important to consider which drugs are used to treat infections and which bacteria actually cause food-borne illness.”

Moreover, Dr. Dunham calls the EWG’s conclusion “that resistance in any bacterium is problematic for human health” an “oversimplication” because some “bacteria are naturally resistant to certain drugs. Also, describing bacteria that are resistant to one, or even a few, drugs as ‘superbugs’ is inappropriate” because superbugs are “pathogens that can cause severe disease and are very difficult to treat,” she notes.

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