Showing posts with label livestock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label livestock. Show all posts

11 October 2016

HEALTH - Veterinary Feed Directive to Control Antibiotic Use

Farmers in many fields – raising everything from cattle to chickens and even bees – are anxious to see how a new federal feed directive will impact operations.

Set to take effect January 1, 2017, the rules will make it more difficult to get antibiotics for livestock but at the same time offer veterinary supervision to hopefully limit the amount consumed by humans.

“Essentially, the directive is an attempt by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to reduce the amount of antibiotics fed to animals that could potentially end up in the human food supply,” a Utah-based Daily Herald article states.

All producers raising animals for human consumption regardless of operation size must comply.

The rules will also require a relationship to be forged between livestock producers and vets when it comes to acquiring medicated food used to treat animals for illnesses including pneumonia and mastitis (an inflammation of the mammary glands which can lead to infection and see a reduction in milk production) the Herald states.

Many in the industry are scrambling to ensure those affected will be prepared when the rules take effect and not blind-sided when looking to access antibiotics for animals.

The new regulations also mean medicated feed can no longer be used to create weight gain but only for medicinal purposes – disease prevention and control.

Currently, livestock owners can get medicated food directly from a feed store but next year it will no longer be legal for them to sell medicated feed without a written directive from a vet.

Some fear that mandating an order be written by a veterinarian will be cumbersome and cause delays, of several days, in the process of getting medication to an animal.

Growing pains are anticipated.

“Most veterinarians aren’t accustomed to the dosages and feeding rates and feeding lengths of time, so there’s going to be a little bit of struggle with that,” Marty Short, general manager of the North Region Feed Mill told the Daily Herald.

According to the Centers for Disease Control at least two million people in the U.S are infected annually by bacteria resistant to antibiotic treatment and more than 20,000 die from these infections.

The major push behind the directive is “to mandate judicious antibiotic use in livestock to reduce the risk of antibiotic resistant bacteria.”

And there appears to be an appetite among would-be consumers to make meat antibiotic free.

A & W, for instance, heavily advertises the fact they no longer have antibiotics (nor hormones or preservatives) in their beef.

While the amount and type of hormones used in meat is closely regulated by Health Canada and the U.S Food and Drug Administration, the issue of antibiotics in farm animals' food supply has been one leading to warnings from health officials both sides of the border.

Canadian officials and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control caution the “growing use of antibiotics in farm animals' food supply is worsening the problem of antimicrobial resistance – the phenomenon of bacteria becoming immune to antibiotics,” a Huffington Post article stated.

Short says, ideally the directive will shed a positive light on the industry in the eyes of consumers.

“The whole process can be a positive for us in improving consumer perception,” he told the Daily Herald.

“Even though most of us feel these things have been judiciously used in most cases, consumers do see a need for it and we need to respond to consumer concerns and we need to take this seriously and do the best we can to comply with these rules.”

Of course, there are glitches yet to be worked out as the directive is rolled out.

Utah beekeepers, for instance, could see operations complicated given most veterinarians – required to write the directives – do not prescribe to bees, David Wilson, a dairy extension veterinarian at Utah State University told the Daily Herald.

“In order to get the antibiotic-medicated cakes, somebody's going to have to become the bee vet,” he said.

Many argue that large-scale meat production relies on antibiotics to keep animals healthy and, according to a CBS report, some studies suggest the risk to humans consuming animals who have been treated with antibiotics is extremely low.

Others contend the “overuse of antibiotics in humans – not animals – (is) causing a rise in drug-resistant bacteria,” and a 2004 study showed “the likelihood that antibiotic would not work in a human due to animal use at 1 in 82 million.”

“The problem is not an animal or human issue per se,” Dr. Tom Chiller with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told CBS.

“It's about using the antibiotics as judiciously as we possibly can in situations where they are needed.”

By Nadia Moharib
Nadia is an animal lover who has adopted everything from birds to hamsters, salamanders, rabbits, fish and felines. She has written about all-things-pets for years and was a long-time editor of a pet magazine in a daily newspaper which featured a Q & A column, Ask Whit, penned by her pooch (ghost written, of course.) The serial dog owner lives in Calgary, Alberta and most days can be found at a dog park picking up after her rescue pooch, Scoots.

14 March 2016

China's First Welfare Codes for Feed Lots, Slaughter Houses


China will have its first draft animal husbandry and slaughtering standards code by June, according to the Chinese Veterinary Medical Association (CVMA), which is working with 30 domestic livestock breeding and slaughtering enterprises to draft the standards.

As reported by Mark Godfrey on GlobalMeatNews.com, the code will cover pigs, poultry, sheep, beef and dairy cattle, and is being driven by a demand for quality and food safety as well as animal welfare concerns.

Historically, animal welfare hasn’t been a high priority for China, but awareness has increased in recent years.

Read the entire story here:

12 September 2015

Particle Size: What is its Importance in Pet Food?


Research has been performed on particle size and digestibility in livestock feed but little research has been done on the impact that particle size has in dog food. Dr. Aulus Carciofi and colleagues studied particle size and digestibility of maize, rice, and sorghum. Particle size was categorized as fine, medium, and coarse. 
The results concluded that particle size is important for maize and sorghum but not for rice. Rice is easily digested and does not require significant processing, unlike maize and sorghum. The research demonstrated that maize and sorghum are "dependent on a proper raw material particle size and need to be appropriately extruded to produce highly digestible foods" according to Carciofi. Carciofi said, “If properly processed, maize and sorghum are as easily digested as rice-based food." Regarding most pet food manufacturers, Carciofi said they "have only one grinding condition for all recipes, and do not change the extrusion size,based on the type of cereal used."


15 June 2015

Quebec Bill Deems Animals Sentient Beings

Last June the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF) ranked Quebec as 12th out of the 13 Canadian provinces and territories based on their animal protection laws. ALDF considered Quebec to be “the best province in which to mistreat an animal.”

Quebec animals are now considered “sentient beings instead of property. The Minister of Agriculture, Pierre Paradis is hoping to change Quebec’s reputation. Bill 54 has the goal of “enshrining animals in Quebec’s Civil Code as sentient beings — that is, feeling and sensing life forms — with their own “biological imperatives,” and not as “furniture” or other movable assets.” The bill highlights the desire of Quebec’s government to punish animal cruelty and is modeled after European legislation (legislation identity was not revealed). Bill 54 has also taken into consideration the animal protection laws in Manitoba, British Columbia, and Ontario.

Fines for those that commit offenses against animals have doubled and range from $500 CDN to $250,000 CDN. Offenders may also receive up to 18 months in prison. Quebec Justice Minister Stephanie Vallee said, “Bill 54 is written in a way that reflects how legislation positively evolves in response to society’s own advancements.”

l’Union des producteurs agricoles (UPA) said that the bill provides flexibility to allow for currently accepted farming practices within the national codes of practice for livestock care and husbandry. UPA said, “[The bill] demonstrates increased public concern, both in Quebec and elsewhere, for the well-being of animals, and that the public wants assurance of humane practices in housing, shipping and slaughter of livestock, as well as safe and responsibly-produced food. For Quebec producers, mistreating an animal, regardless of the circumstances, is an unacceptable action and should be strongly reprimanded.”