- cross-posted to:
- usa
Just to be clear, a little googling around about the drugs in question seems to indicate major use of Ceftriaxone (the front line antibiotic for gonorrhea) and its analogues in factory farming.
Reuters: Special Report: Powerful antibiotic for cows often misused by farmers: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-farmaceuticals-ceftiofur-specialrepor/special-report-powerful-antibiotic-for-cows-often-misused-by-farmers-idUSKCN0JJ03T20141205
Zoetis says ceftiofur is safe to use as directed. “The use of ceftiofur continues to be appropriate when used according to the label directions in those animals that are in at-risk situations,” said Scott Brown, vice president of global therapeutics research at Zoetis.
The stakes are especially high because the drug is part of a crucial class of antibiotics called cephalosporins. The class includes ceftriaxone, a drug that’s vital to treating pneumonia, meningitis and salmonella infections in children, according to the FDA. The use of one type of cephalosporin can compromise the effectiveness of others in the same class.
“There is a very clear link between ceftiofur use and ceftriaxone resistance,” said Paul Fey, a professor of microbiology at University of Nebraska Medical Center. “We know that ceftiofur-resistant salmonella are clearly ceftriaxone-resistant.”
So what’s really distressing here to me is that this likely isn’t even from human overuse, and this affects diseases other than just gonorrhea.
Antibiotic use in pig farming and its associated factors in L County in Yunnan, China: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8025606/
Personal Note: This is not meant to single out China for anything, antibiotic use is out of control for farmers all over the planet. This was just one of the first results that came up for “ceftriaxone farming.”
The use of 20 antibiotics was reported, with oxytetracycline, penicillin, amoxicillin, cefoperazone, norfloxacin, ceftriaxone, ofloxacin, cefradine, chloramphenicol and sulfadiazine ranking in the top 10 as reported by 213 (52.7%), 182 (45.1%), 156 (38.6%), 82 (20.3%), 78 (19.3%), 75 (18.6%), 73 (18.1%), 64 (15.8%), 40 (9.9%) and 39 (9.6%) of the 404 surveyed farmers, respectively (Table 13). These antibiotics were the most commonly used ones by the surveyed farmers in pig rearing. The other 10 antibiotics used are also presented in Table 13. We sorted the 20 antibiotics into nine different classes based on their chemical structures. Table 14 presents the nine classes of antibiotics with the class of penicillin ranking the first (mentioned by 338 farmers), followed by tetracyclines (mentioned by 223 farmers).
It’s really distressing how factory farming is making a huge impact on the ability of antibiotics to continue to be effective.
animal farming is the worst: methane production which is a more potent grennhouse gaz. antibiotic resistance…its messed up!
Water and land use (for growing feed crops) are insane as well.
Lab-grown meat. Lab-grown meat is the answer.
The answer is learn to eat fuckin beans.
I really enjoy the use of the word “learn” here. I can see somebody sitting, stressed, in front of a can of beans, just not knowing what to do
This absolutely cracked me up because I’ve actually been in that scenario. Granted, it was more about the can that I didn’t have a means to open than the beans, but still
The big exam comes around, you show up with your pencil and calculator. Nope. Can of beans. Sorry sir, once you’ve sat for the test there’s no leaving. Good luck. 80 college students pounding it against the floor at once.
kid named vegetables
It’s not.
Yeah, kurzgesagt is neither the pinnacle of science nor research. https://youtu.be/m0tCYhWlT8U
In other news, a vaccine for gonorrhea is on the way.
https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/04/incurable-gonorrhea-there-may-already-be-a-vaccine-for-that/
An existing vaccine that prevents meningococcal disease may also be up to 40 percent effective at preventing gonorrhea infections
While that is indeed good news, that’s a pretty low efficacy rate. It absolutely could help prevent some infections, but it sadly won’t change the diseases curability.
GSK has another one in fast track trials, but I don’t think we know how well it works yet.
Not to belittle the issue, but does this community plan to allow posts sourced from non-academic publications like Ars Technica?
I enjoyed the strict moderation at the other place.
agreed!!!
What’s wrong with ars technica?
Thank you for asking. There’s nothing is wrong with it, generally speaking. But it is not an academic or peer reviewed source. It has many editorialized articles.
I generally like the content they produce at least a little bit, but it’s not science.
Valid question. I’m not sure this science community has as many actual, yaknow, scientists, as the reddit community. I would suspect they are a little less strict as a result. No explicit rules about it in the sidebar.
I’m not even sure there is an academic paper available for this. The article links to the announcement from Massachusetts Department of Public Health, but that doesn’t point to any specific research other than some CDC data from 2021. I think, in this case, it’s more of a public health announcement than research.
The question is whether that would be considered “science” or “science news” or more specifically “healthcare news.”
Luckily for me, I don’t have sex.
But do you ride tractors in your bathing suit?
I didn’t know that was an option.
An unexpected additional race condition for the apocalypse.
Can’t wait till this rips thru The Villages.
Removed by mod
Your first comment, and you go with that, huh?
I’m starting to see why beehaw defederated.
Also his last post on this account
Project much? You must be the life of any party…