3psmars

Friday 22.11

°C
HomeExplore3PSMARS AnalyticsReading

Threat to food security from overuse of antibiotics

UN agriculture agency warns of threat to food security from overuse of antibiotics – The overuse of antibiotics and other antimicrobial agents is impacting rural livelihoods and food security, and requires globally coordinated efforts, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said today.

Speaking to European ministers of health and agriculture at a conference on antimicrobial resistance in Amsterdam, FAO Deputy Director-General Helena Semedo emphasized that antimicrobial agents foster increasing resistance among the very microbes that cause the infections and disease they were designed to quell, thereby threatening to reverse a century of progress in human and animal health.

“Antimicrobial resistance is a global threat that in this inter-connected world cannot be solved in Europe alone,” Ms. Semedo said.

“We have to help save live-saving drugs,” she added.

Aside from the human health considerations, Ms. Semedo underscored that the emergence of microbes resistant to antibiotics and other pharmaceutical agents puts animal health at risk and consequently has an impact on rural livelihoods and food security.

While resistance develops as part of natural adaptation, it is exacerbated by inappropriate use of pharmaceuticals, and the prevalence of resistance in the agricultural sector is generally higher in animal species reared under intensive production systems.

Although FAO favours prudent regulations and measures to control the influx of medicines and reduce their use, Ms. Semedo said that many rural smallholders and pastoralists often face difficult economic choices and that counterfeit drugs are rampant.

“How can we eliminate hunger or improve sustainability when we cannot cure sick animals? How can we reduce rural poverty when the drugs given to ill farm workers and their families no longer have effect?” she asked.

While hailing the Netherlands in particular for reducing the amount of drugs used in its livestock sector by almost 60 per cent in recent years, Ms. Semedo noted that the real challenge is to translate such efforts to countries in need with poor resources. The risk of antimicrobial resistance appears to be particularly high in countries where legislation, surveillance, prevention and monitoring are weak or inadequate, she stressed. Read More (Courtesy: United Nations News Centre) 



Related Content

3PSMARS Analytics

2/9/2016

Unprecedented food crisis looms over strife-torn South Sudan, UN Agencies Warn

Unprecedented food crisis looms over strife-torn South Sudan, UN agencies warn – South Sudan faces unprecedented levels of food insecurity, with 2.8 million people, nearly 25 per cent of the population, in urgent need of aid, at least 40,000 of them on the brink of catastrophe, at a time when the war-torn country is traditionally most food secure, United Nations agencies warned today.

3PSMars Admin

3PSMARS Analytics

10/1/2014

What to expect from the blog

Globally, the subjects you will be reading about on this blog vary in degrees: this is because of the wide coverage of the subject area we are going to be dealing with – Managing for Development Results (MfDR).

3PSMars Admin

3PSMARS Analytics

12/11/2014

What to Expect from My Blog

Globally, the subjects you will be reading on this blog vary in degrees – this is due to the all-encompassing and multidisciplinary nature of the subject – Managing for Development Results (MfDR).

3PSMars Admin

3PSMARS Analytics

2/9/2016

In Somalia, food security and malnutrition situation is ‘alarming’

In Somalia, food security and malnutrition situation is ‘alarming’ – UN report – According to a new United Nations food security and nutrition assessment, the situation in Somalia is alarming and could get worse, especially in parts of Puntland and Somaliland, which have been hard hit by drought exacerbated by El Niño.

3PSMars Admin

3PSMARS Analytics

7/28/2015

Effect of food importation on Foreign Reserve

Nigeria became a net importer of food and major importer of wheat, rice, sugar and fish.

3PSMars Admin

People's Parliament

2/22/2016

Bees can boost food security of two billion small farmers

Bees can help boost food security of two billion small farmers at no cost – UN The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) today highlighted the publication of a new study that quantifies, for the first time, how much crop yields depend on the work of bees that unknowingly fertilize plants as they move from flower to flower.

3PSMars Admin