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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to the Ranking Member, Committee on Rules, House of 
Representatives: 

September 2011: 

Antibiotic Resistance: 

Agencies Have Made Limited Progress Addressing Antibiotic Use in 
Animals: 

GAO-11-801: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-801, a report to the Ranking Member, Committee on 
Rules, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Antibiotics have saved millions of lives, but antibiotic use in food 
animals contributes to the emergence of resistant bacteria that may 
affect humans. The Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and 
Agriculture (USDA) are primarily responsible for ensuring food safety. 
GAO reviewed the issue in 2004 and recommended improved data 
collection and risk assessment. GAO was asked to examine the (1) 
extent to which agencies have collected data on antibiotic use and 
resistance in animals, (2) actions HHS’s Food and Drug Administration 
(FDA) took to mitigate the risk of antibiotic resistance in humans as 
a result of use in animals, (3) extent to which agencies have 
researched alternatives to current use practices and educated 
producers and veterinarians about appropriate use, and (4) actions the 
European Union (EU) and an EU member country, Denmark, have taken to 
regulate use in animals and lessons that have been learned. GAO 
analyzed documents, interviewed officials from national organizations, 
and visited producers in five states and Denmark. 

What GAO Found: 

HHS and USDA have collected some data on antibiotic use in food 
animals and on resistant bacteria in animals and retail meat. However, 
these data lack crucial details necessary to examine trends and 
understand the relationship between use and resistance. For example, 
since GAO’s 2004 report, FDA began collecting data from drug companies 
on antibiotics sold for use in food animals, but the data do not show 
what species antibiotics are used in or the purpose of their use, such 
as for treating disease or improving animals’ growth rates. Also, 
although USDA agencies continue to collect use data through existing 
surveys of producers, data from these surveys provide only a snapshot 
of antibiotic use practices. In addition, agencies’ data on resistance 
are not representative of food animals and retail meat across the 
nation and, in some cases, because of a change in sampling method, 
have become less representative since GAO’s 2004 report. Without 
detailed use data and representative resistance data, agencies cannot 
examine trends and understand the relationship between use and 
resistance. 

FDA implemented a process to mitigate the risk of new animal 
antibiotics leading to resistance in humans, which involves the 
assessment of factors such as the probability that antibiotic use in 
food animals would give rise to resistant bacteria in the animals, but 
it faces challenges mitigating risk from antibiotics approved before 
FDA issued guidance in 2003. FDA officials told GAO that conducting 
postapproval risk assessments for each of the antibiotics approved 
prior to 2003 would be prohibitively resource intensive, and that 
pursuing this approach could further delay progress. Instead, FDA 
proposed a voluntary strategy in 2010 that involves FDA working with 
drug companies to limit approved uses of antibiotics and increasing 
veterinary supervision of use. However, FDA does not collect the 
antibiotic use data, including the purpose of use, needed to measure 
the strategy’s effectiveness. 

HHS and USDA have taken some steps to research alternatives to current 
antibiotic use practices and educate producers and veterinarians on 
appropriate use of antibiotics. However, the extent of these efforts 
is unclear because the agencies have not assessed their effectiveness. 
Without an assessment of past efforts, the agencies may be limited in 
their ability to identify gaps where additional research is needed. 
Except for one $70,400 USDA project, all other federal education 
programs have ended. 

Since 1995, the EU, including Denmark, banned the use of antibiotics 
to promote growth in animals, among other actions. Some of their 
experiences may offer lessons for the United States. For example, in 
Denmark, antibiotic use in animals initially decreased following a 
series of policy changes. The prevalence of resistant bacteria 
declined in food animals and retail meat in many instances, but a 
decline in humans has only occasionally been documented. Denmark’s 
data on use and resistance helped officials track the effects of its 
policies and take action to reverse unwanted trends. The EU faces 
difficulty collecting data that can be compared across countries, but 
officials there said such data are needed to fully understand how use 
in animals may lead to resistance in humans. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that HHS and USDA (1) identify and evaluate approaches 
to collecting detailed data on antibiotic use in animals and use these 
data to evaluate FDA’s voluntary strategy, (2) collect more 
representative data on resistance, and (3) assess previous efforts on 
alternatives to identify where more research is needed. HHS and USDA 
agreed with GAO’s recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-801] or key 
components. For more information, contact Lisa Shames at (202) 512-
3841 or shamesl@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Agency Data Are Limited and Restrict Efforts to Understand Antibiotic 
Resistance: 

FDA Implemented a Process to Mitigate Resistance Risk for Newer 
Antibiotics but Faces Challenges with Older Antibiotics: 

Agencies Took Steps to Research Alternatives and Educate Users, but 
Progress Is Unclear: 

Regulation of Antibiotics in the EU and Denmark May Offer Lessons for 
the United States: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Alternative Modes of Food Animal Production: 

Appendix III: The Food and Drug Administration's Antibiotic Sales Data: 

Appendix IV: Structure of DANMAP: 

Appendix V: ARS and NIFA Research Activities Related to Alternatives 
to Current Antibiotic Use Practices: 

Appendix VI: CDC and FDA Research Activities Related to Alternatives 
to Current Antibiotic Use Practices: 

Appendix VII: Comments from the Department of Agriculture: 

Appendix VIII: Comments from the Department of Health and Human 
Services: 

Appendix IX: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Agencies with Responsibilities Related to Antibiotics in Food 
Animals: 

Table 2: Current Federal Efforts Collecting Data on Antibiotic Use: 

Table 3: Components of NARMS: 

Table 4: The Overlap between Growth Promotion and Disease Prevention 
Uses in Food Animal Antibiotics: 

Table 5: HHS Education Activities Related to Appropriate Antibiotic 
Use from 2001-2011: 

Table 6: USDA Education Activities Related to Appropriate Antibiotic 
Use from 2001-2011: 

Table 7: 2009 Sales and Distribution Data, by Drug Class, for 
Antimicrobial Drugs Approved for Use in Food-Producing Animals in the 
United States: 

Table 8: 2009 Sales and Distribution Data, by Route of Administration, 
for Antimicrobial Drugs Approved for Use in Food-Producing Animals in 
the United States: 

Table 9: Components of DANMAP: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Potential Pathways for Spread of Antibiotic-Resistant 
Bacteria from Animals to Humans: 

Figure 2: EU and Denmark Actions to Regulate Antibiotic Use in Food 
Animals, 1994-2010: 

Figure 3: Antibiotic Use in Swine in Denmark 1994-2010: 

Figure 4: Grass-Fed Cattle Raised without Antibiotics: 

Figure 5: Free-Range Chickens at a Portable Chicken House: 

Abbreviations: 

ADUFA: Animal Drug User Fee Amendments of 2008: 

APHIS: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service: 

ARMS: Agricultural Resource Management Survey: 

ARS: Agricultural Research Service: 

CAHFSE: Collaboration in Animal Health and Food Safety Epidemiology: 

CDC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: 

CIPARS: Canadian Integrated Program on Antimicrobial Resistance 
Surveillance: 

DANMAP: Danish Integrated Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring and 
Research Program: 

ERS: Economic Research Service: 

EU: European Union: 

FDA: Food and Drug Administration: 

FSIS: Food Safety and Inspection Service: 

HACCP: Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points: 

HHS: Department of Health and Human Services: 

MRS: Amethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus: 

NAHMS: National Animal Health Monitoring System: 

NARMS: National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System: 

NIFA: National Institutes of Food and Agriculture: 

NIH: National Institutes of Health: 

NOP: National Organic Program: 

USDA: U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

VFD: veterinary feed directive: 

WHO: World Health Organization: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

September 7, 2011: 

The Honorable Louise M. Slaughter: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Rules: 
House of Representatives: 

Dear Ms. Slaughter: 

Antibiotics have saved millions of lives by controlling infectious 
diseases, but the continued effectiveness of these drugs is now 
jeopardized by the emergence of bacteria resistant to antibiotics, 
according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Antibiotic-resistant 
infections can result in the use of more expensive drugs for 
treatment, longer hospital stays, and even death. In addition, the 
speed at which antibiotic resistance is rendering these drugs 
ineffective far outpaces the development of new antibiotics, according 
to WHO. Potential contributors to antibiotic-resistant infections in 
humans include the widespread use of antibiotics in human medicine, 
the presence of antibiotics in the environment, and the use of 
antibiotics in animals raised for human consumption--often referred to 
as food animals--such as cattle, swine, and poultry. 

Antibiotics are an integral part of animal production in the United 
States and many other countries. According to food animal producers, 
antibiotic use reduces the cost of producing animals and, therefore, 
the price consumers pay for food. Antibiotics are used to treat animal 
diseases; to prevent and control the spread of diseases during phases 
of production when animals are at an increased risk of illness, such 
as weaning; and to increase animals' growth rate. Public health 
officials are particularly concerned about the use of antibiotics to 
promote growth because such antibiotics are administered in low doses 
over long periods to large groups of healthy animals, which can cause 
animals to become reservoirs of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Once 
the resistant bacteria develop in food animals, they may be passed to 
humans through the consumption or handling of meat or other animal-
derived food products, contact with animals by farm workers or food 
processors, or runoff of animal waste into soil or water. 

Two federal departments are primarily responsible for ensuring the 
safety of the food supply, including the safe use of antibiotics in 
food animals--the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and 
the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Within HHS, the Food and 
Drug Administration (FDA) approves for sale, and regulates the 
manufacture and distribution of, antibiotics used in animals. USDA 
collects information about antibiotic use and resistance in food 
animals, funds research related to antibiotic resistance, and educates 
producers and other users about appropriate antibiotic use. 

In April 1999, we reported on federal responsibilities related to 
tracking and overseeing antibiotic use in food animals and noted that, 
despite more than two decades of discussion, federal agencies had not 
reached agreement on the safe use of antibiotics in food animals. 
[Footnote 1] We recommended that agencies develop and implement a plan 
to evaluate the risks and benefits of the existing and future use of 
antibiotics in agriculture. Subsequently, in 1999, HHS created the 
Interagency Task Force on Antimicrobial Resistance to coordinate 
federal efforts to address antibiotic resistance in humans and 
animals. This task force developed A Public Health Action Plan to 
Combat Antimicrobial Resistance in January 2001 to serve as a 
blueprint for federal coordination to address antibiotic resistance. 

In April 2004, we again reviewed the issue of antibiotic use in food 
animals and made two recommendations: that FDA expedite its risk 
assessments of the extent to which antibiotic use in food animals 
poses a risk to human health, and take mitigating action, if 
necessary; and that HHS and USDA jointly develop and implement a plan 
for collecting data on antibiotic use in animals.[Footnote 2] HHS and 
USDA generally agreed with our findings, but neither has implemented 
the recommendations, though both departments continued independent 
data collection efforts rather than working jointly to develop and 
implement a plan. Furthermore, we reported that countries in the 
European Union (EU), in particular Denmark, were taking significant 
steps to restrict the use of antibiotics in animals and that many 
countries, including Denmark and Canada, collect detailed data on 
antibiotic use in animals. 

In 2007, we added food safety to our list of high-risk areas that 
warrant attention by Congress and the executive branch. Our biennial 
reviews of high-risk issues in 2009 and 2011 concluded that 
fragmentation of federal food safety oversight continues to be a 
problem.[Footnote 3] We have made several recommendations on this 
issue, including recommending that agencies develop a government-wide 
performance plan for food safety that includes results-oriented goals 
and performance measures, as well as information about strategies and 
resources.[Footnote 4] 

In this context, you asked us to evaluate federal efforts to address 
risks from antibiotic use in food animals. Our objectives were to 
determine (1) the extent to which federal agencies have collected data 
on antibiotic use and resistance in food animals, (2) the actions FDA 
has taken to mitigate the risk of antibiotic resistance in humans as a 
result of antibiotic use in food animals, (3) the extent to which 
federal agencies have conducted research on alternatives to current 
antibiotic use practices and educated producers and veterinarians 
about appropriate antibiotic use, and (4) what actions the EU and an 
EU member country, Denmark, have taken to regulate antibiotic use in 
food animals and what lessons, if any, have been learned. 

In conducting our work, we reviewed documents related to antibiotic 
use in food animals, including applicable laws; federal plans, 
regulations, and guidance; and federal reports on antibiotic use, 
resistance, research, and education. We also interviewed and collected 
documentation from officials at HHS and USDA. In addition, we 
conducted structured interviews with representatives of a 
nonprobability sample of 11 national organizations representing 
producers of food animals, pharmaceutical companies, and public health 
organizations. Representatives of these organizations, who spoke on 
behalf of their members, answered questions about federal efforts to 
collect data on antibiotic use and resistance, conduct research on 
alternatives to antibiotics, and educate producers and veterinarians. 
We selected these organizations because of their expertise in topics 
surrounding antibiotic use in animals and resistance. Furthermore, we 
conducted a structured interview of a nonprobability sample of five 
representatives of national veterinary organizations about federal 
efforts to conduct research on alternatives to antibiotics and educate 
producers and veterinarians, as well as any efforts they may have 
undertaken to address these issues. We sought to include a variety of 
organizations with perspectives about antibiotic use and resistance; 
however, the views of organizations consulted should not be considered 
to represent all perspectives about these issues and are not 
generalizable. In addition, we conducted site visits with conventional 
and alternative (either organic or antibiotic-free) producers of 
poultry, cattle, swine, and dairy products to obtain a better 
understanding of production practices; the types of antibiotic use 
data available at the farm level; and perspectives on federal efforts 
to educate producers about antibiotics. During these site visits, we 
also spoke with veterinarians involved with food animal production. 

To identify actions the EU and Denmark have taken regarding antibiotic 
use in food animals, we met with EU and Danish government officials, 
veterinarians, and producer organizations. We selected the EU and 
Denmark because they implemented bans on growth promotion uses of 
antibiotics in 2006 and 2000, respectively, which allows for a review 
of the effects of these policies in the years since. In addition, we 
reviewed documents detailing the results of EU and Danish policy 
actions and interviewed Danish producers and veterinarians at 
conventional poultry and swine farms to learn about their experiences 
implementing government regulations on antibiotic use. A more detailed 
description of our objectives, scope, and methodology is presented in 
appendix I. 

We conducted this performance audit from August 2010 to September 
2011, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

Antibiotics are substances that destroy microorganisms or inhibit 
their growth; they have been used for 70 years to treat people who 
have bacterial infections. In this report, the term antibiotic is used 
to refer to any substance used to kill or inhibit microorganisms, also 
sometimes referred to as an antimicrobial. Resistance to penicillin, 
the first broadly used antibiotic, started to emerge soon after its 
widespread introduction. Since that time, resistance to other 
antibiotics has emerged, and antibiotic resistance is becoming an 
increasingly serious public health problem worldwide. 

Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Can Spread through a Number of Pathways: 

Bacteria acquire antibiotic resistance through mutation of their 
genetic material or by acquiring genetic material that confers 
antibiotic resistance from other bacteria. In addition, some bacteria 
developed resistance to antibiotics naturally, long before the 
development of commercial antibiotics. Once bacteria in an animal or 
human host develop resistance, the resistant strain can spread from 
person to person, animal to animal, or from animals to humans. 

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria can spread from animals and cause 
disease in humans through a number of pathways (see figure 1). For 
example, unsanitary conditions at slaughter plants and unsafe food 
handling practices could allow these bacteria to survive on meat 
products and reach a consumer. Resistant bacteria may also spread to 
fruits, vegetables, and fish products through soil, well water, and 
water runoff contaminated by fecal matter from animals harboring these 
bacteria. If the bacteria are disease-causing, the consumer may 
develop an infection that is resistant to antibiotics. However, not 
all bacteria cause illness in humans. For example, there are hundreds 
of unique strains of Escherichia coli (E. coli), the majority of which 
are not dangerous. Indeed, while some strains of E. coli are dangerous 
to humans, many E. coli bacteria strains are a normal component of 
human and animal digestive systems. 

Figure 1: Potential Pathways for Spread of Antibiotic-Resistant 
Bacteria from Animals to Humans: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

1) Bacterial population (both resistant and susceptible) in farm 
animals. 

2) Antibiotic is given to animal for disease prevention, disease 
control, disease treatment, or growth promotion. 

3) Antibiotic kills susceptible bacteria; resistant bacteria survive 
in contaminated animals. 

4) Resistant bacteria spread to other animals on the farm through 
contact with contaminated animals. 

5) Resistant bacteria spread to consumers via contaminated meat 
products. 

6) Resistant bacteria spread to farm workers and food processors 
through contact with contaminated animals or meat. 

7) Resistant bacteria spread to soil and water from contaminated 
animal waste. 

8) Resistant bacteria spread to fish, fruits, and vegetables consumed by
humans. 

9) Resistant infection may develop in humans. 

Sources: GAO; Art Explosion (human figures). 

Note: This figure is not intended to represent the full complexity of 
resistance transmission. For example, antibiotic-resistant bacteria 
can also be transferred from humans to animals. 

[End of figure] 

Antibiotics Are Currently Used in Food Animal Agriculture: 

The use of antibiotics in animals poses a potential human health risk, 
but it is also an integral part of intensive animal production in 
which large numbers of poultry, swine, and cattle are raised in 
confinement facilities. Over time, food animal production has become 
more specialized and shifted to larger, denser operations, known as 
concentrated animal feeding operations. According to a 2009 USDA 
study, The Transformation of U.S. Livestock Agriculture: Scale, 
Efficiency, and Risks, this shift has led to greater efficiencies in 
agricultural productivity--meaning more meat and dairy production for 
a given commitment of land, labor, and capital resources--and lower 
wholesale and retail prices for meat and dairy products. However, the 
study notes larger farms with higher concentrations of animals may be 
more vulnerable to the rapid spread of animal diseases, which 
producers may combat by using antibiotics. Some producers elect to 
raise food animals without using antibiotics, in what are known as 
alternative modes of production (see appendix II for more information 
about alternative modes of production). 

[Side bar: Dairy Production: 
Modern dairy production is diverse, ranging from cows housed indoors 
year-round to cows maintained on pasture nearly year-round. In the 
United States, milk comes primarily from black and white Holstein cows
genetically selected for milk production. Over the years, the 
concentration of more cows on fewer farms has been accompanied by
dramatic increases in production per cow, arising from improved 
genetic selection, feeds, health care, and management techniques. 
Expansion to larger herd sizes has also allowed producers to increase 
the efficiency of production and capitalize on economies of scale. 
When a cow is no longer able to breed and produce milk, it is usually 
sold to the market as beef. According to the National Milk Producers’ 
Federation, dairy producers use antibiotics to treat mastitis, an 
inflammation of the udder, and other diseases. Any milk produced 
during antibiotic treatment, and for a specific withdrawal period 
after treatment has ceased, must be discarded in order to prevent 
antibiotic residues in milk. This discarded milk imposes an economic 
cost to dairy producers, so producers generally avoid treating dairy 
cows with antibiotics when possible. According to the National Milk 
Producers’ Federation, dairy producers do not use antibiotics for growth
promotion that are medically important in human medicine. Source: GAO. 
End of side bar] 

Antibiotics provide significant benefits to animal production 
according to USDA. For food animals, the purposes for which FDA 
approves the use of antibiotics can be divided into the following four 
categories: 

* Disease treatment: administered only to animals exhibiting clinical 
signs of disease. 

* Disease control: administered to a group of animals when a 
proportion of the animals in the group exhibit clinical signs of 
disease. 

* Disease prevention: administered to a group of animals, none of 
which are exhibiting clinical signs of disease, in a situation where 
disease is likely to occur if the drug is not administered. 

* Growth promotion: sometimes referred to as feed efficiency, 
administered to growing, healthy animals to promote increased weight 
gain. Such uses are typically administered continuously through the 
feed or water on a herd-or flock-wide basis. Although such use is not 
directed at any specifically identified disease, many animal producers 
believe the use of antibiotics for growth promotion has the additional 
benefit of preventing disease, and vice versa. 

In recent years, both FDA and WHO have sought to identify antibiotics 
that are used in both animals and people and that are important to 
treat human infections, also known as medically important antibiotics. 
Specifically, according to FDA, a medically important antibiotic is 
given the highest ranking--critically important--if it is used to 
treat foodborne illness and if it is one of only a few alternatives 
for treating serious human disease. For example, the fluoroquinolone 
class of antibiotics is critically important to human medicine because 
it is used to treat foodborne illnesses caused by the bacteria 
Campylobacter (one of the most common causes of diarrheal illness in 
the United States), and it is also one of only a few alternatives for 
treating serious multidrug resistant infections in humans. Some 
fluoroquinolones are also approved to treat respiratory infections in 
cattle. 

Several Federal Agencies Have Responsibilities and Authorities Related 
to Animal Antibiotic Use: 

Two federal departments are primarily responsible for ensuring the 
safety of the U.S. food supply, including the safe use of antibiotics 
in food animals--HHS and USDA. Each department contains multiple 
agencies that contribute to the national effort to assess, measure, 
and track antibiotic use and resistance (see table 1). Both HHS and 
USDA officials have stated that it is likely that the use of 
antibiotics in animal agriculture leads to some cases of antibiotic 
resistance among humans and that medically important antibiotics 
should be used judiciously in animals. 

Table 1: Agencies with Responsibilities Related to Antibiotics in Food 
Animals: 

Department: HHS; 
Agency: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Conducts surveillance[A] and other research to assess the extent of 
antibiotic resistance and contributes data about antibiotic resistance 
in humans to the interagency National Antimicrobial Resistance 
Monitoring System (NARMS), a national public health surveillance 
system to track antibiotic resistance in foodborne bacteria; 
* Promotes appropriate use of antibiotics in animals through 
educational activities and training. 

Department: HHS; 
Agency: FDA; 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Approves for sale and regulates the manufacture and distribution of 
animal antibiotics; 
* Coordinates NARMS (with CDC and ARS) and contributes data about 
antibiotic resistance in retail meat; 
* Conducts research on antibiotic resistance and educates animal 
antibiotic users about appropriate use. 

Department: HHS; 
Agency: National Institutes of Health (NIH); 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Conducts research on recognizing, responding to, and circumventing 
the processes that contribute to antibiotic resistance. 

Department: USDA; 
Agency: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS); 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Manages the National Animal Health Monitoring System (NAHMS)--a 
periodic, national survey of producers that focuses on animal health, 
welfare, and production; 
* Manages the National Veterinary Accreditation Program, which 
certifies private veterinarians to carry out certain federal animal 
health programs. 

Department: USDA; 
Agency: Agricultural Research Service (ARS); 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Conducts research in the food safety and animal health programs on 
alternatives to antibiotics, and the development, persistence, and 
transmission of antibiotic-resistant organisms or resistance genes; 
* Contributes data about antibiotic resistance in bacteria from food 
animals at slaughter plants to NARMS.[B]. 

Department: USDA; 
Agency: Economic Research Service (ERS); 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Conducts the Agricultural Resource Management Survey (ARMS), which 
principally focuses on farm finances, and their links to farm 
production practices and management decisions. The survey is also used 
to track and analyze practices, including antibiotic use, as they 
relate to food safety and the production and availability of food 
animals. 

Department: USDA; 
Agency: Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS); 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Inspects slaughter plants, food processing, and import 
establishments in the United States; 
* Contributes samples collected from food animals or food animal 
products at slaughter plants as a part of NARMS. 

Department: USDA; 
Agency: National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA)[C]; 
Contribution to antibiotic resistance efforts: 
* Funds research, education, and extension or outreach activities on 
antibiotic resistance through grants to universities and other 
organizations. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] According to the interagency task force, public health 
surveillance is the ongoing and systematic collection, analysis, and 
interpretation of data for use in the planning, implementation, and 
evaluation of public health practice. 

[B] ARS also tests bacteria gathered through NAHMS for antibiotic 
resistance. 

[C] NIFA was formerly known as the Cooperative State Research, 
Education, and Extension Service. 

[End of table] 

[Side bar: Pork Production: 
The United States is the world’s third-largest pork producer and 
largest pork exporter. Pigs are produced in several types of specialized
operations. Farrow-to-finish operators raise pigs from birth to 
slaughter. In multisite pig production, different phases of production
occur at different locations, and breeding pigs are isolated from 
other pigs at various stages of production. After weaning, pigs move 
into either a “wean-to-finish” building, where they stay until sent to 
slaughter, or to a “nursery” building (pictured above) and, 6-8 weeks
later, to a “finisher” building until slaughter. According to USDA, 
the U.S. pork industry has shifted rapidly toward fewer large
operations, and operations that specialize in a single phase of 
production have replaced many farrow-to-finish operations. According to
the National Pork Producers’ Council, multisite production is designed 
to keep pigs of the same age together and maximize pig health. 
Producers minimize disease exposure by keeping pigs in the same groups 
and thoroughly cleaning barns between herds. However, moving pigs from 
site to site also presents disease challenges as pigs are exposed to 
new bacteria from new environments and other animals. Producers may use
antibiotics to prevent diseases during vulnerable periods, as well as 
to treat illnesses. Pork producers may also use antibiotics for growth 
promotion, particularly when feed costs are high. Source: GAO. 
End of side bar] 

As mentioned, HHS and USDA agencies participate in the Interagency 
Task Force on Antimicrobial Resistance, which developed a plan in 2001 
to help federal agencies coordinate efforts related to antibiotic 
resistance. The 2001 interagency plan contains 84 action items 
organized in four focus areas: surveillance, prevention and control, 
research, and product development. According to the 2001 interagency 
plan, public health surveillance, which includes monitoring for 
antibiotic resistance, is the ongoing and systematic collection, 
analysis, and interpretation of data for use in the planning, 
implementation, and evaluation of public health practice. Many of the 
plan's action items focus on antibiotic use and resistance in humans, 
and some action items address the use of antibiotics in agriculture, 
including food animal production, and are directly relevant to this 
report. For example, one action item in the surveillance focus area 
states the agencies' intentions to develop and implement procedures 
for monitoring antibiotic use in agriculture, as well as in human 
medicine. Another states that agencies will expand surveillance for 
antibiotic-resistant bacteria in sick and healthy food animals on 
farms and at slaughter plants, as well as in retail meat, such as 
chicken, beef, and pork. The action plan also contains action items 
related to research on alternatives to antibiotics and providing 
education to producers and veterinarians about appropriate antibiotic 
use. 

Since 2001, HHS and USDA have used the interagency task force to 
coordinate their activities on antibiotic resistance. For example, 
each year the task force produces an annual report listing activities 
completed in that year related to the 2001 interagency plan. The task 
force recently released a 2010 version of the interagency plan, which 
is still in draft form but is expected to be finalized this year. The 
draft 2010 interagency plan contains some new initiatives and also 
reformulates many of the action items listed in the 2001 plan to be 
more action-oriented. 

Agency Data Are Limited and Restrict Efforts to Understand Antibiotic 
Resistance: 

The 2001 interagency plan discusses two types of data needed to 
understand antibiotic resistance--data on the amount of antibiotics 
used in food animals ("use data") and data on the level of antibiotic 
resistance in bacteria found in food animals and retail meat 
("resistance data"). Agencies have collected some data to track 
antibiotic use in animals, but these data lack crucial details 
identified by the 2001 interagency plan as essential for agencies to 
examine trends and understand the relationship between use and 
resistance. To collect data on antibiotic resistance, agencies have 
leveraged existing programs, but because these programs were designed 
for other purposes, their sampling methods do not yield data that are 
representative of antibiotic resistance in food animals and retail 
meat across the United States. USDA also collected data on both use 
and resistance in a pilot program that was discontinued. 

Agencies Collect Data on Use That Lack Crucial Details: 

The 2001 interagency plan set a "top priority" action item of 
monitoring antibiotic use in veterinary medicine, including monitoring 
data regarding species and purpose of use. The plan stated this 
information is essential for interpreting trends and variations in 
rates of resistance, improving the understanding of the relationship 
between antibiotic use and resistance, and identifying interventions 
to prevent and control resistance. The task force's draft 2010 
interagency plan reiterates the importance of monitoring antibiotic 
use and sets a goal to better define, characterize, and measure the 
impact of antibiotic use in animals. 

Three federal efforts collect data about antibiotic use in food 
animals (see table 2). One of these efforts, run by FDA, was created 
by Congress as a reporting requirement for pharmaceutical companies to 
provide sales data. The other two efforts are run by USDA agencies and 
collect on-farm data on antibiotic use by incorporating questions into 
existing surveys of food animal producers. 

Table 2: Current Federal Efforts Collecting Data on Antibiotic Use: 

Program: Animal Drug User Fee Amendments of 2008; 
Agency: FDA; 
Information collected: (1) the amount of each antibiotic sold by 
container size, strength, and dosage form; (2) quantities distributed 
domestically and quantities exported; and; (3) a listing of the target 
animals, and the approved ways each antibiotic can be used; 
Source of information: New Animal Drug sponsors (generally 
pharmaceutical companies); 
Frequency of reporting: Annual. 

Program: NAHMS; 
Agency: APHIS; 
Information collected: Information about how antibiotics are 
administered (e.g., in water, feed, or by injection), the number of 
animals treated, producers' preferred antibiotics for various 
ailments, and situations when producers would use an antibiotic; 
Source of information: Producers; 
Frequency of reporting: Varies; 
every 6-7 years for most animal commodities. 

Program: ARMS; 
Agency: ERS; 
Information collected: Information about antibiotic use as a 
production practice, such as how antibiotic use affects livestock 
production and farm financial performance; 
Source of information: Producers; 
Frequency of reporting: Varies; 
approximately every 5 years. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

Sales Data: 

Since our 2004 report,[Footnote 5] FDA has begun to collect and 
publish data from pharmaceutical companies on antibiotics sold for use 
in food animals, as required by the Animal Drug User Fee Amendments of 
2008 (ADUFA). Under ADUFA, the sponsor of an animal antibiotic--
generally a pharmaceutical company--must report annually to FDA: (1) 
the amount of each antibiotic sold by container size, strength, and 
dosage form; (2) quantities distributed domestically and quantities 
exported; and (3) a listing of the target animals and the approved 
ways each antibiotic can be used (called indications). Section 105 of 
ADUFA also directs FDA to publish annual summaries of these data. To 
fulfill this requirement, FDA published the first of these reports on 
its public Web site in December 2010. (See appendix III for examples 
of antibiotic sales data collected by FDA.) However, to protect 
confidential business information, as required by statute, FDA's 
report summarizes the sales data by antibiotic class, such as 
penicillin or tetracycline, rather than by specific drug and also 
aggregates sales data for antibiotic classes with fewer than three 
distinct sponsors. 

In submitting the original ADUFA legislation for the House of 
Representatives to consider, the House Committee on Energy and 
Commerce stated that it expected these data to further FDA's analysis 
of, among other things, antibiotic resistance, but the data do not 
include crucial details that would be needed to do so. Specifically, 
ADUFA does not require FDA to collect information on the species in 
which antibiotics are used and the purpose of their use. According to 
representatives of all the producer and public health organizations we 
spoke with, because FDA's sales data lack information on the species 
in which the antibiotic is used, these data do not allow the federal 
government to achieve the antibiotic use monitoring action item in the 
2001 interagency plan, including interpreting trends and variations in 
rates of resistance, improving the understanding of the relationship 
between antibiotic use and resistance, and identifying interventions 
to prevent and control resistance. For example, a representative of 
one public health organization stated that species-specific data is 
needed to link antibiotic use in animals with resistance in animals 
and food. Representatives of most of the public health organizations 
also stated that the government needs to collect data on the purpose 
of antibiotic use--that is if the antibiotic is being given for 
disease treatment, disease control, disease prevention, or growth 
promotion. Furthermore, representatives of some public health 
organizations indicated that data on antibiotic use should be 
integrated with information on antibiotic resistance to allow analysis 
of how antibiotic use affects resistance. However, a representative of 
an animal pharmaceutical organization stated that FDA should not 
attempt to collect national-level antibiotic use data and should 
instead collect local data to facilitate study of farm management 
practices in order to help farmers better use antibiotics. 

According to FDA officials, sales data can provide an overall picture 
of the volume of antibiotics sold for use in animals. However, FDA 
faces several challenges in collecting detailed antibiotic sales data 
from drug sponsors. First, if an antibiotic is approved for use in 
multiple species, drug sponsors may not be able to determine how much 
of their product is used in a specific species. Second, if an 
antibiotic is approved for multiple purposes, drug sponsors also may 
not be able to determine how much is used for each purpose. Third, 
antibiotics may be stored in inventory or expire before they are used, 
so the quantity sold and reported to the FDA may not equal the 
quantity actually used in animals. FDA officials acknowledged the 
limitation of their current sales data and noted that the agency is 
exploring potential approaches to gather more detailed sales data or 
other information on actual antibiotic use. 

On-Farm Data: 

Two USDA agencies collect data on antibiotic use from food animal 
producers by incorporating questions into existing surveys. One of 
these surveys, managed by APHIS, is the National Animal Health 
Monitoring System (NAHMS), a periodic, national survey of producers 
that focuses on animal health and management practices. APHIS staff 
collect information from producers on how antibiotics are administered 
(e.g., in water, feed, or injection), what antibiotics they prefer for 
various ailments, and in what situations they would use an antibiotic. 
To collect this information, APHIS staff visit farms multiple times 
over the course of 3 to 6 months and survey producers' practices. 
Previous NAHMS surveys have examined management practices for dairy 
cows, swine, feedlot cattle, cow-calf operations, small broiler 
chicken flocks, and egg-laying chicken flocks, among other species. 
APHIS officials told us that one of NAHMS' strengths is its national 
scope and that NAHMS can be used to examine changes in animal 
management practices, including antibiotic use practices, between 
NAHMS surveys. However, as we reported in 2004, NAHMS produces a 
snapshot of antibiotic use practices in a particular species, but the 
data it collects cannot be used to monitor trends in the amount of 
antibiotics used over time. According to APHIS officials, these 
limitations remain today. For example, these officials said that NAHMS 
is limited by long lag times (approximately 6 years) between surveys 
of the same species, changes in methodology and survey populations 
between studies, reliance on voluntary participation by food animal 
producers, and collection of qualitative, rather than quantitative 
information on antibiotic use. 

[Side bar: Beef Production: 
The United States is the world’s largest producer of beef. The beef 
industry is roughly divided into two production sectors: cow-calf 
operations and cattle feeding. Beef cattle are born in a cow-calf 
operation, where both cows and calves are fed grass in a pasture year-
round. Once weaned, most cattle are sent to feedlots, where they are 
fed grain for about 140 days. The beef industry has become 
increasingly concentrated. According to USDA, feedlots with 1,000 or 
more head of cattle comprise less than 5 percent of total feedlots in 
the United States, but market 80 to 90 percent of fed cattle. Weaning, 
shipping, and processing put stress on cattle and compromise their 
immune systems. According to the National Cattleman’s Beef Association,
beef producers use antibiotics to treat common illnesses, including 
respiratory disease, eye infections, intestinal disease, anaplasmosis 
(a red blood cell parasite), and foot infections. Some cattle 
producers also use antibiotics for growth promotion. Source: USDA. 
End of side bar] 

Since our 2004 report, USDA's ERS has begun to collect information on 
antibiotic use through the Agricultural Resource Management Survey 
(ARMS)--a survey of farms conducted since 1996--though these data have 
limitations similar to those of NAHMS. ERS uses ARMS data to study how 
production practices, including antibiotic use, affect financial 
performance and whether specific production practices can substitute 
for other production practices. For example, a January 2011 ERS study 
found that broiler chicken producers who forgo subtherapeutic uses of 
antibiotics (i.e., use in chickens that are not ill) tend to use 
distinctly different production practices, such as testing flocks and 
feed for pathogens, fully cleaning chicken houses between each flock, 
and feeding chickens exclusively from vegetable sources. However, like 
NAHMS, ARMS cannot be used to examine trends in antibiotic use over 
time because ERS does not resurvey the same farms over time or conduct 
annual surveys on specific commodities. 

According to officials from agencies and some organizations, it is 
challenging to collect detailed data on antibiotic use in animals from 
producers for a variety of reasons. First, producers may not always 
maintain records on antibiotic use. Second, producers who do collect 
these data may be reluctant to provide them to the federal government 
voluntarily. FDA is exploring its legal options for requiring 
producers to report antibiotic use data to FDA. In addition, we 
observed during our site visits that the types of use data producers 
collected varied widely. For example, one producer used electronic 
systems to track all treatments by individual animal, whereas others 
maintained paper records, and one maintained no records. Also, some 
food animal species, such as broiler chickens, are generally produced 
by integrated companies, which own the chickens from birth through 
processing and contract with a grower to raise them. These growers 
often receive feed as part of a contract and may not know whether that 
feed contains antibiotics. For example, one grower we visited did not 
know that his animals received antibiotics for growth promotion, 
though the veterinarian from his integrated company indicated that 
they did. Surveys, such as NAHMS and ARMS, that rely on producers or 
growers to provide antibiotic use data may be particularly limited by 
this lack of available data. Moreover, collecting data on-farm from 
producers is expensive for the federal agencies involved due to the 
large amount of personnel and time required. 

[Side bar: Poultry Production: 
The United States is the world’s largest poultry producer and second-
largest poultry exporter, with broiler chickens—-those used for meat-—
comprising over four-fifths of U.S. poultry production. The broiler 
chicken industry in the United States is vertically integrated, 
meaning that the same company-—the integrator-—generally owns the
birds from birth through processing. Integrators contract with local, 
independent growers to raise the birds, providing chicks, feed, and
veterinary services to the grower and visiting each facility regularly 
to check for health issues. (Above is a picture of broiler chickens
in a grower facility.) According to the National Chicken Council, 
broiler producers may use antibiotics to treat diseases, such as 
bacterial enteritis (which causes diarrhea in chickens), 
as well as for growth promotion. Source: USDA. 
End of side bar] 

Agencies also face challenges collecting antibiotic use data from 
other sources. For example, use data gathered from veterinarians may 
be of limited value because, according to FDA officials, many 
antibiotics can be purchased without veterinary involvement. In cases 
where antibiotics do require a prescription, the usefulness of records 
maintained by veterinarians may vary. For example, one veterinary 
clinic we visited maintained extensive paper records dating back 2 
years, but because they were not electronic, these records would be 
difficult to analyze. In addition, a veterinary organization we spoke 
with stated that it would be cumbersome for veterinarians to provide 
this information to an agency because there is no centralized 
reporting mechanism, such as an electronic database, for them to do 
so. According to an official from an organization representing the 
animal feed industry, feed mills also maintain records on antibiotics 
mixed into animal feed, including the amount of antibiotic used and 
the type of feed the antibiotic went into. Although feed mills do not 
intentionally track antibiotic use by species, the official said that 
collectively, this information could be used to track antibiotic use 
by species. However, FDA officials told us that collecting use data 
from feed mills would require the development of a new reporting 
mechanism for these data. 

Agencies Are Leveraging Existing Programs to Collect Resistance Data, 
but These Data Are Not Representative: 

In 2004, we reported that the federal government collects resistance 
data through the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System 
(NARMS), established in 1996. NARMS is an interagency effort that 
monitors antibiotic resistance in certain bacteria under three 
programs: the animal component, led by ARS, samples bacteria from food 
animals at slaughter plants; the retail meat component, led by FDA, 
samples retail meat purchased from grocery stores; and the human 
component, led by CDC, samples bacteria from humans (see table 3). FDA 
serves as the funding and coordinating agency. From fiscal years 2006 
through 2010, the NARMS budget remained constant at $6.7 million, with 
ARS, FDA, and CDC receiving $1.4 million, $3.5 million, and $1.8 
million, respectively. NARMS received a funding increase in fiscal 
year 2011, to $7.8 million. 

Table 3: Components of NARMS: 

Agency: ARS and FSIS; 
Source of bacteria: Animals at slaughter plants--chicken, turkey, 
cattle, swine[A]; 
Bacteria tested for antibiotic resistance: Salmonella (chicken, 
turkey, cattle, swine); Campylobacter (chicken); E. coli (chicken); 
Enterococcus (chicken). 

Agency: FDA; 
Source of bacteria: Retail meat--samples of chicken breasts, pork 
chops, ground turkey, ground beef; 
Bacteria tested for antibiotic resistance: All 11 participating 
states[B] culture four products for Salmonella and two products 
(chicken breast and ground turkey) for Campylobacter; 4 of these 
states also culture four products for E. coli and Enterococcus. 

Agency: CDC; 
Source of bacteria: Humans; 
Bacteria tested for antibiotic resistance: All 50 states culture for 
typhoidal Salmonella, non-typhoidal Salmonella, E. coli O157, Shigella; 
10 states culture Campylobacter[C]. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] ARS also tests bacteria gathered through NAHMS for antibiotic 
resistance. 

[B] FoodNet is a collaborative project between CDC and 10 
participating states: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, 
Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Tennessee. 

[C] In addition, some states culture non-clinical Enterococcus and E. 
coli. CDC also previously tested Listeria and generic E. coli, but is 
not currently doing so. 

[End of table] 

The 2001 interagency plan contains an action item stating agencies 
will design and implement a national antibiotic resistance 
surveillance plan. Among other things, the 2001 interagency plan 
states that agencies will expand and enhance coordination of 
surveillance for drug-resistant bacteria in sick and healthy animals 
on farms, food animals at slaughter plants, and retail meat. The plan 
also states that collecting data on antibiotic resistance will help 
agencies detect resistance trends and improve their understanding of 
the relationship between use and resistance. The draft 2010 
interagency plan also reiterates the importance of resistance 
surveillance and includes several action items aimed at strengthening, 
expanding, and coordinating surveillance systems for antibiotic 
resistance. According to WHO's Surveillance Standards for 
Antimicrobial Resistance, which provides a framework to review 
existing antibiotic resistance surveillance efforts, populations 
sampled for surveillance purposes should normally be representative of 
the total population--in this case, food animals and retail meat in 
the United States. Additionally, WHO's surveillance standards state 
that it is important to understand the relationship of the population 
surveyed to the wider population, meaning that agencies should 
understand how food animals and retail meat surveyed in NARMS are 
similar to food animals and retail meat throughout the United States. 

The food animal component of NARMS, led by ARS, gathers bacteria from 
food animal carcasses at slaughter plants and tests them for 
antibiotic resistance, but because of a change in sampling method has 
become less representative of food animals across the United States 
since we reported in 2004. ARS receives these samples from an FSIS 
regulatory program called the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control 
Points (HACCP) verification testing program, which is designed to, 
among other things, reduce the incidence of foodborne illness. FSIS 
inspectors work in slaughter plants around the country, where they 
collect samples from carcasses to test for foodborne pathogens, among 
other duties. When we last reported on antibiotic resistance in 2004, 
HACCP verification testing included two sampling programs--a 
nontargeted program, in which inspectors sampled randomly selected 
plants, and a targeted program, in which slaughter plants with a 
higher prevalence of bacteria causing foodborne illness were more 
likely to be selected for additional sampling. In 2006, FSIS 
eliminated the random sampling program, which FSIS officials told us 
has allowed the agency to use its resources more effectively. FSIS now 
conducts only targeted sampling of food animals in its HACCP 
verification testing. This nonrandom sampling method means the NARMS 
data obtained through HACCP are not representative of food animals 
across the country and cannot be used for trend analysis because 
bacteria tested by NARMS are now collected at greater rates from 
slaughter plants that are not in compliance with food safety 
standards. According to FDA officials, due to this sampling method, 
the resulting data are skewed for NARMS purposes. 

The NARMS retail meat component, led by FDA, collects samples of meat 
sold in grocery stores and tests them for antibiotic-resistant 
bacteria, but these samples may not be representative of retail meat 
throughout the United States. The program began in 2002 and has since 
expanded to collect retail meat samples from 11 states: the 10 
participant states in CDC's FoodNet program, which conducts 
surveillance for foodborne diseases, plus Pennsylvania, which 
volunteered to participate in retail meat sampling (See table 3 for 
the types of bacteria tested). Due to its nonrandom selection of 
states, FDA cannot determine the extent to which NARMS retail meat 
samples are representative of the United States. FDA collects bacteria 
from those states that volunteer to participate in the program, so 
some regions of the country are not represented in the NARMS retail 
meat program. According to the FDA Science Advisory Board's 2007 
review of NARMS, this lack of a national sampling strategy limits a 
broader interpretation of NARMS data.[Footnote 6] According to FDA 
officials, FDA has not analyzed how representative these samples are 
of the national retail meat supply in the United States but officials 
believe that the samples provide useful data that serves as an 
indicator for monitoring US retail meat. 

FDA is aware of the sampling limitations in NARMS and has articulated 
a strategic goal of making NARMS sampling more representative and 
applicable to trend analysis in a draft 2011-2015 NARMS Strategic 
Plan, which was released for public comment in January 2011. The 
comment period closed in May 2011, and FDA is currently making changes 
to the plan based on the submitted comments. The plan states that 
NARMS will become more representative by, among other things, 
modifying its animal sampling to overcome the biases resulting from 
the current reliance on HACCP verification testing and improving the 
geographic representation of retail meat testing, though FDA has not 
yet planned specific actions to achieve this goal. 

According to FDA officials, in light of increased funding for NARMS in 
2011, they are exploring ways to improve NARMS sampling to make it 
more representative. FDA hosted a public meeting in July 2011 to 
solicit public comment on NARMS animal and retail meat sampling 
improvements. At this meeting, ARS officials discussed two new on-farm 
projects--one pilot project, in collaboration with FDA, plans to 
collect samples from feedlot cattle, dairy cows, and poultry with the 
goal of evaluating potential sampling sites within the food animal 
production chain (e.g., on farms or in holding pens at slaughter 
plants). The second project is in collaboration with Ohio State 
University and plans to use industry personnel to collect samples from 
poultry and swine producers. Both projects will test samples for 
antibiotic resistance through NARMS. Some of the additional 
suggestions discussed during this meeting included changing FSIS 
sampling to provide more representative data to NARMS, discontinuing 
slaughter plant sampling altogether in favor of an on-farm sampling 
program, and increasing the number of state participants in the retail 
meat sampling program. 

The NARMS human component, led by CDC, collects and tests bacteria 
from health departments in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. 
We reviewed the issue of antibiotic resistance and antibiotic use in 
humans in 2011. This review examined, among other things, the human 
component of NARMS and concluded that CDC's data is nationally- 
representative for four of the five bacteria included in the program. 
[Footnote 7] 

In our interviews, representatives of producer and public health 
organizations identified several challenges associated with collecting 
data on antibiotic resistance. First, according to representatives 
from most public health organizations, ARS, FDA, and CDC are limited 
by available funding. Sampling and testing bacteria can be expensive, 
and agencies have to balance competing priorities when allocating 
resources. For example, in the NARMS retail meat program, FDA could 
choose to expand retail meat sampling geographically by adding new 
states to the program, expand the number of bacteria tested, expand 
the number of samples collected, or expand the types of meat sampled. 
Second, according to representatives of several producer and public 
health organizations, agencies may face challenges cooperating and 
reaching consensus with one another. For example, NARMS reports do not 
include interpretation of resistance trends across NARMS components. 
Specifically, while NARMS issues annual Executive Reports that combine 
data from all three components of NARMS (available on FDA's Web site), 
these reports do not provide interpretation of NARMS data. According 
to FDA officials, it is difficult to develop consensus on 
interpretation for these reports because agencies differ in their 
interpretations and preferred presentations of NARMS data. Third, 
according to the FDA Science Advisory Board's 2007 review of NARMS, 
the lag between NARMS data collection and report issuance can 
sometimes be excessive. For example, as of August 2011, the latest 
NARMS Executive Report covered 2008 data. According to FDA and CDC 
officials, the process of testing bacteria, analyzing and compiling 
data, and obtaining approval from agencies is time-consuming and 
increases the lag time of NARMS reports. 

In our interviews, representatives of public health organizations also 
suggested that federal agencies collect additional types of resistance 
data. First, representatives of several organizations suggested that 
agencies expand the types of bacteria tested for antibiotic 
resistance. FDA is aware of this suggestion and has considered whether 
to add to the types of bacteria it tests. For example, recent studies 
have discussed methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in 
retail meat. MRSA is a type of bacteria that is resistant to several 
antibiotics, including penicillin, and that can cause skin infections 
in humans and more severe infections in health care settings. In 
response, FDA is conducting a pilot study to collect data on the 
prevalence of MRSA in retail meat. However, according to FDA 
officials, FDA is unlikely to include MRSA in its regular NARMS 
testing because general consensus in the scientific community is that 
food does not transmit community-acquired MRSA infections in humans. 
Second, representatives of three public health organizations suggested 
that federal agencies link resistance data with data on outbreaks of 
foodborne illness in humans, which representatives of one organization 
stated could help scientists document the link between animal 
antibiotic use and resistant outbreaks of foodborne illness. According 
to representatives of this organization, NARMS' resistance data are 
not currently linked to information about foodborne disease outbreaks. 
According to CDC officials, CDC tests bacteria associated with 
foodborne illness outbreaks in humans for antibiotic resistance, but 
does not routinely publish these data. 

USDA Discontinued a Program That Collected Data on Both Use and 
Resistance: 

When we last reported on antibiotic resistance in 2004, APHIS, ARS, 
and FSIS collected on-farm use and resistance data from 40 swine 
producers through the pilot Collaboration in Animal Health and Food 
Safety Epidemiology (CAHFSE), but this program faced challenges in 
collecting data and was discontinued in 2006 due to lack of funding. 
By collecting information from the same facilities over time, agencies 
could use CAHFSE data to examine the relationship between antibiotic 
use and resistance. However, according to officials at APHIS and ARS, 
collecting quarterly on-farm data was burdensome and generated a large 
number of bacterial samples, which were costly to test and store. 
Although the agencies wanted to use CAHFSE to monitor antibiotic 
resistance throughout the food production system, officials from all 
three agencies told us that this "farm to fork" monitoring raised 
logistical challenges. For example, FSIS officials examined the 
feasibility of monitoring resistance data through the slaughter plant 
but discovered that slaughter plants were reluctant to participate in 
the program due to fear of enforcement actions and confidentiality 
concerns. According to APHIS officials, CAHFSE released quarterly and 
annual data summaries, but it did not issue an overall capping report 
or formal evaluation of the program. 

CAHFSE was discontinued, but NAHMS continues to collect three types of 
bacteria (Salmonella, Campylobacter, and E. coli) from a subset of 
surveyed producers and sends them to ARS for antibiotic resistance 
testing. However, as discussed earlier in this report, NAHMS data 
provide a snapshot of a particular species but cannot be used to 
monitor trends. Additionally, as discussed earlier in this report, ARS 
has started two on-farm projects to collect bacteria from food 
animals. In one of these projects, which collects samples from poultry 
and swine, ARS partners with integrated companies to collect a variety 
of samples from producers. According to an ARS official, because 
personnel to collect samples were responsible for the majority of 
costs in the CAHFSE program, using industry personnel rather than ARS 
staff to collect on-farm samples can significantly reduce the costs of 
on-farm sampling. 

Although data on both use and resistance can be difficult to collect, 
other countries have been successful in doing so. For example, the 
Canadian government's Canadian Integrated Program on Antimicrobial 
Resistance Surveillance (CIPARS), created in 2002, provides an example 
of on-farm collection of antibiotic use and resistance data. In 
addition to gathering resistance data similar to NARMS, CIPARS also 
has an on-farm component, which collects antibiotic use information 
annually from about 100 swine producers and integrates it with data 
from resistance testing on fecal samples from the same farms. CIPARS 
addresses funding limitations by restricting on-farm surveillance to 
swine, sampling annually rather than quarterly, and collecting 
slaughter plant samples through industry personnel. A CIPARS official 
stated that the program's on-farm data could be used to link 
antibiotic use and antibiotic resistance at the herd level and help 
identify interventions to prevent antibiotic resistance. CIPARS issues 
annual reports, which include interpretation of the data such as 
discussions of trends over time. For example, the most recent report, 
from 2007, noted an increase in the percentage of bacteria resistant 
to several antibiotics in samples collected from pigs at slaughter 
plants from 2003 to 2007. 

Denmark also has a use and resistance data collection system, called 
the Danish Integrated Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring and Research 
Program (DANMAP). Data collection covers antibiotic use in food 
animals and humans, as well as antibiotic resistance in food animals, 
meat in slaughter plants and at retail, and in humans. The objectives 
of DANMAP are to monitor antibiotic use in food animals and humans; 
monitor antibiotic resistance in bacteria from food animals, food of 
animal origin, and humans; study associations between antibiotic use 
and resistance; and identify routes of transmission and areas for 
further research studies. According to DANMAP officials, Denmark 
achieves these goals by gathering data on veterinary prescriptions, 
since all antibiotic use in Denmark is via prescription-only. For 
veterinary prescriptions, these officials told us Denmark gathers data 
on the medicine being prescribed, the intended species and age group 
in which the prescription will be used, the prescribed dose of the 
antibiotic, the prescribing veterinarian, and the farm on which the 
prescription will be used. Further, DANMAP collects information on 
antibiotic resistance in food animals, from healthy animals at 
slaughter plants and from diagnostic laboratory submissions from sick 
animals. Denmark also gathers both domestically produced and imported 
retail meat samples from throughout the country to test for antibiotic 
resistance. DANMAP officials noted that, in Denmark, the industry is 
responsible for collecting and submitting bacterial samples from 
slaughter plants for testing, according to a voluntary agreement, and 
that the industry spends additional funds to do so. DANMAP issues 
annual reports, which include interpretation of data on antibiotic use 
in animals and humans, as well as data on antibiotic resistance in 
bacteria from food animals, retail meat, and humans. Some DANMAP 
reports also include more detailed analysis of particular areas of 
interest. For example, the 2009 DANMAP report examined E. coli 
resistant to penicillins in pigs, retail meat, and humans and found 
that antibiotic use in both animals and humans contributes to the 
development of penicillin-resistant E. Coli. See appendix IV for more 
information on DANMAP. 

FDA Implemented a Process to Mitigate Resistance Risk for Newer 
Antibiotics but Faces Challenges with Older Antibiotics: 

FDA implemented a risk assessment process for antibiotic sponsors, 
generally pharmaceutical companies, to mitigate the risk of resistance 
in food animals to antibiotics approved since 2003. However, the 
majority of antibiotics used in food animals were approved prior to 
2003, and FDA faces significant resource challenges in assessing and 
mitigating the risk of older antibiotics. Instead, FDA has proposed a 
voluntary strategy to mitigate this risk but has neither developed a 
plan nor collected the "purpose of use" data necessary to measure the 
effectiveness of its strategy. 

FDA Implemented a Risk Assessment Process to Mitigate Resistance Risk 
for New Antibiotics: 

FDA approves for sale, and regulates the manufacture and distribution 
of, drugs used in veterinary medicine, including drugs given to food 
animals. Prior to approving a new animal drug application, FDA must 
determine that the drug is safe and effective for its intended use in 
the animal. It must also determine that the new drug intended for 
animals is safe with regard to human health, meaning that there is 
reasonable certainty of no harm to human health from the proposed use 
of the drug in animals. FDA may also take action to withdraw an animal 
drug when new evidence shows that it is not safe with regard to human 
health under the approved conditions of use. 

In 2003, FDA issued guidance recommending that antibiotic sponsors 
include a risk assessment of any new antibiotics for use in food 
animals. The guidance is known as Evaluating the Safety of 
Antimicrobial New Animal Drugs with Regard to Their Microbiological 
Effects on Bacteria of Human Health Concern, Guidance for Industry 
#152. Under this framework, an antibiotic sponsor would assess three 
factors: the probability that the resistant bacteria are present in 
the animal as a consequence of the antibiotic use, the probability 
that humans would ingest the bacteria in question, and the probability 
that human exposure to resistant bacteria would result in an adverse 
health consequence. As part of the third factor, the sponsor considers 
the importance of the antibiotic to treating human illness, under the 
assumption that the consequences of resistance are more serious for 
more important antibiotics. The guidance provides a preliminary 
ranking of antibiotics considered medically important to human 
medicine, with the highest ranking assigned to antibiotics deemed 
"critically important" if it is (1) used to treat foodborne illness 
and (2) one of only a few alternatives for treating serious human 
disease. An antibiotic is considered highly important if it meets one 
of these two criteria. By considering all three factors, the sponsor 
estimates the overall risk of the antibiotic's use in food animals 
adversely affecting human health. Though this risk assessment process 
is recommended by FDA, the antibiotic sponsor is free to prove the 
safety of a drug in other ways and to consult with FDA to decide if 
the approach is recommended for its animal antibiotic application. FDA 
officials said that, in practice, the risk of antibiotic resistance is 
considered as part of any new animal antibiotic approval. 

According to FDA documents, this risk assessment process has been 
effective at mitigating the risk of resistance posed by new 
antibiotics because antibiotic sponsors usually consider the risk 
assessment process in their product development, so the products 
ultimately submitted for approval are intended to minimize resistance 
development. Representatives of some producer, public health, and 
veterinary organizations, as well as an animal pharmaceutical 
organization, told us that they were generally satisfied with the risk 
assessment approach. For example, a representative of an animal 
pharmaceutical organization commented that the risk assessment process 
was helpful in that it provided a clear road map for drug approvals. 
Representatives of a veterinary organization said they were pleased 
that new antibiotics were examined using a comprehensive, evidence-
based approach to risk assessment. 

However, several organizations also raised concerns. For instance, a 
representative of an animal pharmaceutical organization said that 
FDA's risk assessment process was an overly protective "blunt 
instrument," since FDA would likely not approve any antibiotic product 
designed for use in feed to prevent or control disease in a herd or 
flock if the antibiotic is critically important to human health. 
Representatives from this pharmaceutical organization and a veterinary 
organization said that FDA's guidance makes it very difficult for 
antibiotic sponsors to gain approval for new antibiotics for use in 
feed or water. 

In addition, representatives of several public health organizations 
said that flaws in the criteria FDA used to rank medically important 
antibiotics may lead the agency to the inappropriate approval of 
animal antibiotics. For example, they identified a class of 
antibiotics known as fourth-generation cephalosporins, which are an 
important treatment for pneumonia in humans and one of the sole 
therapies for cancer patients with certain complications from 
chemotherapy. However, since neither of these are also foodborne 
diseases, under FDA criteria this antibiotic is not ranked as 
critically important in treating human illness, which these 
organizations said could lead to the approval of fourth-generation 
cephalosporins for use in food animals and, eventually, increased 
antibiotic resistance. FDA officials recently said they intend to 
revisit the antibiotic rankings to reflect current information. 
However, FDA officials noted that they believed the current ranking 
appropriately focused on antibiotics used to treat foodborne illnesses 
in humans given that the objective of the guidance was to examine the 
risk of antibiotic use in food animals. 

FDA Faces Resource Challenges in Assessing the Risk of Older 
Antibiotics: 

According to FDA officials, the majority of antibiotics used in food 
animals were approved prior to 2003. FDA faces significant challenges 
to withdraw agency approval, either in whole or in part, of these 
antibiotics if concerns arise about the safety of an antibiotic. If 
FDA initiates a withdrawal action because of safety questions that 
have arisen after an antibiotic's approval, the agency has the initial 
burden of producing evidence sufficient to raise serious questions 
about the safety of the drug. Once FDA meets this initial burden of 
proof, the legal burden then shifts to the antibiotic sponsor to 
demonstrate the safety of the drug. If, after a hearing, the FDA 
Commissioner finds, based on the evidence produced, that the 
antibiotic has not been shown to be safe, then the product approval 
can be withdrawn. 

FDA's 5-year effort to withdraw approval for one antibiotic for use in 
poultry illustrates the resource-intensive nature of meeting the legal 
burden to withdraw an approved antibiotic. It is the only example of 
FDA withdrawing an antibiotic's approval for use in food animals 
because of concerns about resistance. Specifically, Enrofloxacin, 
approved in October 1996, is in the critically important 
fluoroquinolone class of antibiotics, used to treat foodborne 
illnesses caused by the bacteria Campylobacter, and it was used in 
poultry flocks via the water supply to control mortality associated 
with E. coli and other organisms. In October 2000, based on evidence 
of increased fluoroquinolone resistance in bacteria from animals and 
humans, FDA initiated a proceeding to withdraw its approval for the 
use of two types of fluoroquinolones in poultry. One pharmaceutical 
company voluntarily discontinued production, but the manufacturer of 
enrofloxacin challenged the decision. FDA officials told us that it 
took significant time and resources to gather evidence for the case, 
even though they had good data showing a correlation between the 
drug's approval for use in poultry and increasing resistance rates in 
humans. After an administrative law judge found that enrofloxacin was 
not shown to be safe for use in poultry as previously approved, the 
FDA's Commissioner issued the final order withdrawing approval for its 
use effective September 2005. 

FDA officials said that from this case they learned that taking a case-
by-case approach to withdrawing antibiotics due to concerns over 
resistance was time-consuming and challenging. In our 2004 review of 
federal efforts to address antibiotic resistance risk, we reported FDA 
was planning to conduct similar risk assessments of other previously 
approved antibiotics.[Footnote 8] FDA officials estimated, however, 
that the enrofloxacin withdrawal cost FDA approximately $3.3 million, 
which they said was significant. FDA officials told us that conducting 
individual postapproval risk assessments for all of the antibiotics 
approved prior to 2003 would be prohibitively resource intensive, and 
that pursuing this approach could further delay progress on the issue. 

FDA Proposed a Voluntary Strategy for Older Antibiotics but Has No 
Plan to Assess Effectiveness: 

Instead of conducting risk assessments for individual antibiotics 
approved prior to 2003, FDA in June 2010 proposed a strategy to 
promote the "judicious use" of antibiotics in food animals. FDA 
proposed the strategy in draft guidance titled The Judicious Use of 
Medically Important Antimicrobial Drugs in Food-Producing Animals, 
draft Guidance for Industry #209. FDA describes judicious uses as 
those appropriate and necessary to maintain the health of the food 
animal. The draft guidance includes two principles aimed at ensuring 
the judicious use of medically important antibiotics. First, that 
antibiotic use is limited to uses necessary for assuring animal 
health--such as to prevent, control, and treat diseases. Second, that 
animal antibiotic use is undertaken with increased veterinary 
oversight or consultation. To implement the first principle, FDA is 
working with antibiotic sponsors to voluntarily phase out growth 
promotion uses of their antibiotics. FDA officials told us they have 
met with four of the approximately nine major antibiotic sponsors to 
discuss withdrawing growth promotion uses from their antibiotics' 
labels and that they plan to engage with generic antibiotic 
manufacturers in the near future. To implement the second principle of 
increasing veterinarian oversight of antibiotic use, FDA officials 
told us that they would like to work with antibiotic sponsors to 
voluntarily change the availability of medically important antibiotics 
currently approved for use in feed from over the counter to veterinary 
feed directive (VFD) status. The majority of in-feed antibiotics are 
currently available over the counter, but VFD status would instead 
require these antibiotics to be used with the professional supervision 
of a licensed veterinarian. In March 2010, FDA issued an advance 
notice of proposed rulemaking announcing its intention to identify 
possible changes to improve its current rule on VFDs and seeking 
public comments on how to do so. FDA officials told us that they 
received approximately 80 comments by the end of the comment period in 
August 2010 from interested parties on how to improve the VFD rule, 
and were taking them into consideration as they drafted the rule, 
which they hope to publish in 2011. In April 2011, the American 
Veterinary Medicine Association also formed a new committee to help 
FDA develop practical means to increase veterinary oversight of 
antibiotic use. 

Representatives of several producer organizations, veterinary 
organizations, and an animal pharmaceutical organization expressed 
concern that FDA's focus on ending growth promotion uses would 
adversely affect animal health. In particular, these representatives 
said that some animal antibiotics approved for growth promotion may 
also prevent disease, though they are not currently approved for that 
purpose. FDA officials said that, in cases where pharmaceutical 
companies can prove such claims, FDA would be willing to approve these 
antibiotics for disease prevention. FDA officials emphasized, however, 
that they do not want companies to relabel existing growth promotion 
antibiotics with new disease prevention claims with no substantive 
change in the way antibiotics are actually used on the farm. FDA 
officials told us they plan to issue additional guidance for 
antibiotic sponsors to outline a specific process for making changes 
in product labels. 

Furthermore, representatives of several producer and veterinary 
organizations we spoke with expressed concerns about FDA's efforts to 
increase veterinary oversight because there is shortage of large 
animal veterinarians. As we reported in February 2009, there is a 
growing shortage of veterinarians nationwide, particularly of 
veterinarians who care for food animals, serve in rural communities, 
and have training in public health.[Footnote 9] Additionally, 
representatives of veterinary organizations said that the paperwork 
requirements under VFDs are onerous. In particular, this is because 
VFDs require the veterinarian to deliver a copy of the VFD to the feed 
producer directly for each VFD, and there are not yet many systems for 
electronic distribution. 

In addition, representatives of several public health organizations 
expressed concern that FDA's strategy will not change how antibiotics 
are used for two reasons. First, because FDA is depending on voluntary 
cooperation to remove growth promotion uses from antibiotic labels, 
there is no guarantee that pharmaceutical companies will voluntarily 
agree to relabel their antibiotics. To underline the seriousness of 
their concerns, in May 2011, several public health organizations filed 
a suit to force FDA to withdraw its approval for the growth promotion 
uses of two antibiotic classes (penicillins and tetracyclines). 
Second, representatives of some public health organizations noted that 
several medically important antibiotics (six out of eight) currently 
approved by FDA for growth promotion or feed efficiency are already 
approved for disease prevention uses in some species (see table 4), 
which could negate the impact of FDA's strategy. Because disease 
prevention dosages often overlap with growth promotion dosages, 
representatives of one of these organizations said that food animal 
producers might simply alter the purpose for which the antibiotics are 
used without altering their behavior on the farm. One veterinarian 
told us that if FDA withdrew an antibiotic's approval for growth 
promotion, he could continue to give the antibiotic to the animals 
under his care at higher doses for prevention of a disease commonly 
found in this species. The veterinarian stated that there is an 
incentive to do so because using an animal antibiotic can help the 
producers he serves use less feed, resulting in cost savings. For 
example, the in-feed antibiotic may cost approximately $1 per ton of 
feed, but it can save $2 to $3 per ton of feed, making it an effective 
choice for the producer. 

Table 4: The Overlap between Growth Promotion and Disease Prevention 
Uses in Food Animal Antibiotics: 

Antibiotic class: Macrolides; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Critically important; 
Antibiotic name: Tylosin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Empty]; 
Poultry: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Macrolides; 
Antibiotic name: Erythromycin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check]; 
Poultry: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Lincosamides; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Highly important; 
Antibiotic name: Lincomycin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Empty]; 
Poultry: [Check]; 
Swine: [Check] (shaded light gray). 

Antibiotic class: Penicillin; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Highly important; 
Antibiotic name: Penicillin G Procaine; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Empty]; 
Poultry: [Check]; 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Streptogramins; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Highly important; 
Antibiotic name: Virginiamycin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Poultry: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Tetracyclines; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Highly important; 
Antibiotic name: Chlortetracycline; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Poultry: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Swine: [Check] (shaded light gray). 

Antibiotic class: Tetracyclines; 
Antibiotic name: Oxytetracycline; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Poultry: [Check] (shaded light gray); 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Pleuromutilins; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Highly important; 
Antibiotic name: Tiamulin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Empty]; 
Poultry: [Empty]; 
Swine: [Check]. 

[All of the following are shaded dark gray] 

Antibiotic class: Glycolipids; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Not ranked; 
Antibiotic name: Bambermycins; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check]; 
Poultry: [Check]; 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Polypeptides; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Not ranked; 
Antibiotic name: Bacitracin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check]; 
Poultry: [Check]; 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Quinoxalines; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Not ranked; 
Antibiotic name: Carbadox; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Empty]; 
Poultry: [Empty]; 
Swine: [Check]. 

Antibiotic class: Ionophores; 
FDA ranking of the importance of antibiotic class to human medicine: 
Not ranked; 
Antibiotic name: Monensin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check]; 
Poultry: [Check]; 
Swine: [Empty]. 

Antibiotic class: Ionophores; 
Antibiotic name: Lasalocid; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check]; 
Poultry: [Check]; 
Swine: [Empty]. 

Antibiotic class: Ionophores; 
Antibiotic name: Laidlomycin; 
Approved uses by animal: 
Cattle: [Check]; 
Poultry: [Empty]; 
Swine: [Empty]. 

Source: GAO analysis of FDA data. 

Note: A {Check} indicates FDA approved growth promotion uses, 
including weight gain and improving feed efficiency. Light gray 
shading denotes the overlap between antibiotics approved for growth 
promotion and disease prevention purposes. Boxes in dark gray denote 
antibiotics not ranked important to human health by FDA. 

[End of table] 

Although representatives of some producer and public health 
organizations have raised doubts about the effectiveness of FDA's 
strategy, FDA does not have a plan to collect the data necessary to 
understand the purpose for which antibiotics are being used or have a 
plan to measure the effectiveness of its strategy to encourage more 
judicious use of antibiotics in animals. FDA officials told us the 
agency will consider this strategy to be successful when all the 
growth promotion uses of medically important antibiotics are phased 
out. FDA officials were unable to provide a timeline for phasing out 
growth promotion uses, though they identified several next steps FDA 
intends to take, such as finalizing the guidance document describing 
their voluntary strategy and issuing additional guidance on its 
implementation, as well as proceeding forward with the VFD rulemaking 
process. However, FDA officials stated that the agency had no further 
plans to measure its progress. In addition, FDA will still allow 
medically important antibiotics to be used for disease prevention. 
However, because agency data on sales of antibiotics used in food 
animals do not include the purpose for which the antibiotics are used, 
it will be difficult for FDA to evaluate whether its strategy has 
increased the judicious use of antibiotics or simply encouraged a 
shift in the purpose of use--for instance, from growth promotion to 
disease prevention--without lessening use. FDA officials told us the 
agency is exploring approaches for obtaining additional information 
related to antimicrobial drug use to enhance the antibiotic sales data 
that is currently reported to FDA as required by ADUFA, but did not 
provide a timeline for these efforts. 

Agencies Took Steps to Research Alternatives and Educate Users, but 
Progress Is Unclear: 

USDA and HHS agencies have taken some steps to research alternatives 
to current antibiotic use practices and educate producers and 
veterinarians on appropriate use of antibiotics but the extent of 
these steps is unclear because neither USDA nor HHS has assessed the 
progress toward fulfilling the related action items in the 2001 
interagency plan. 

USDA and HHS Have Conducted Research on Alternatives but Have Not 
Assessed Progress: 

An action item in the 2001 interagency plan states that federal 
agencies will promote the development of alternatives to current 
antibiotic use, including through research. According to the 2001 
interagency plan, such alternatives could include researching vaccines 
and management practices that prevent illnesses or reduce the need for 
antibiotic use. However, USDA has not tracked its activities in this 
area, and neither USDA nor HHS has determined progress made toward 
this action item. 

Since 2001, USDA agencies have undertaken some research related to 
developing alternatives. However, according to agency officials they 
are unable to provide a complete list of these activities because 
USDA's research database is not set up to track research at this level 
of detail. Instead, research is categorized within the larger food 
safety research portfolio. In addition, the agencies did not report 
any activities under this action item in the annual reports published 
by the interagency task force. Based on documents provided by USDA and 
research activities that USDA reported to the interagency task force 
under other research action items, we identified 22 projects the 
department funded since 2001 related to alternatives to current 
antibiotic use practices, with total funding of at least $10 million 
(see appendix V). In addition, ARS officials emphasized that the 
majority of research performed at ARS related to improving 
agricultural practices can result in reduced antibiotic needs by 
producers. Officials from both NIFA and ARS said that they had not 
assessed the extent to which the research conducted helped achieve the 
action item in the 2001 interagency plan. Indeed, conducting such an 
assessment would be difficult without a complete list of relevant 
research activities. NIFA officials told us that additional funding 
and resources would be needed to conduct such an assessment, but they 
did not provide more specific details on how many additional resources 
would be needed to do so. Although an assessment of research 
activities on alternatives has not been conducted, ARS officials 
nevertheless said the agency plans to conduct more research on 
alternatives to antibiotics in the next 5 years. 

Similar to USDA agencies, HHS agencies have conducted some research on 
alternatives. Specifically, from 2001 through 2005, CDC and FDA 
sponsored at least five research grants that included funding to 
research alternatives and reduce resistant bacteria in food animals 
(see appendix VI). NIH has conducted research related to antibiotic 
resistance that may have applications in both humans and in animals, 
but agency officials told us that NIH considers human health issues 
its research priority. Like USDA agencies, HHS agencies did not report 
any research activities under the action item related to antibiotic 
alternatives to the interagency task force. No HHS agency has 
sponsored any such research activities since 2005. HHS officials told 
us this is because USDA may be the most appropriate lead agency for 
undertaking alternatives research related to food animals. USDA 
officials acknowledged that they have a role in researching 
alternatives to antibiotics, although they said that it is also 
important for HHS to be involved since FDA would likely be the 
regulatory agency to approve any products resulting from such 
research. CDC and FDA officials told us that their agencies have not 
performed any assessments to determine whether their research 
activities have helped the agency to fulfill this action item in the 
2001 interagency plan. 

Representatives of the national veterinary, producer, public health, 
and animal pharmaceutical organizations that we spoke with told us 
that greater federal efforts are needed to research alternatives to 
current antibiotic use in animals. In addition, representatives from 
most of the veterinary and several public health organizations we 
spoke with said that the federal government should make greater 
efforts to coordinate with the food animal industry about researching 
alternatives to current antibiotic use. Specifically, most 
representatives from the producer and veterinary organizations 
emphasized a need for the federal government to provide funding and 
other resources to the food animal industry for research projects 
looking at alternatives. For example, representatives from one 
veterinary organization told us that several national producer and 
veterinary organizations have goals of utilizing prevention as an 
alternative to antibiotic use and said that the federal government 
could help by conducting research on preventive measures such as 
vaccine development. 

The draft 2010 interagency plan includes an action item reiterating 
that agencies will conduct research on alternatives to current 
antibiotic use practices, yet USDA and HHS agencies have not evaluated 
their previous research to determine the extent to which the action 
item in the 2001 interagency plan was achieved. Without an assessment 
of past research efforts, agencies may be limited in their ability to 
identify gaps where additional research is needed. In addition, the 
draft 2010 interagency plan does not identify steps agencies intend to 
take to conduct research on alternatives or time frames for taking 
these steps. In contrast, other action items listed in the draft 2010 
interagency plan under the surveillance, prevention and control, and 
product development focus areas include specific implementation steps 
illustrating how agencies plan to achieve them. CDC officials told us 
that the interagency task force agreed not to identify implementation 
steps until after the final version of the 2010 interagency plan is 
published, at which time the task force will publish its plans for 
updating the 2010 interagency plan. In addition, ARS officials said 
that the interagency task force requested agencies to identify 
implementation steps that could be accomplished within the next 2 
years, and USDA was unable to determine such steps for alternatives 
research. We have previously reported that evaluating performance 
allows organizations to track the progress they are making toward 
their goals, and it gives managers critical information on which to 
base decisions for improving their programs.[Footnote 10] Tracking 
progress and making sound decisions is particularly important in light 
of the fiscal pressures currently facing the federal government. 

HHS and USDA Educated Users on Appropriate Use but Have Not Assessed 
Progress: 

An action item in the 2001 interagency plan states that federal 
agencies will educate producers and veterinarians about appropriate 
antibiotic use. Programs at both HHS and USDA have sought to educate 
users about appropriate antibiotic use, but the impact of these 
efforts has not been assessed. In addition, agricultural extension 
agents and national associations also advise producers on appropriate 
antibiotic use. The draft 2010 interagency plan no longer has an 
explicit action item related to appropriate antibiotic use education. 
There is currently one education activity on appropriate antibiotic 
use, and after the completion of this effort, there are no plans to 
develop new education activities. 

HHS: 

HHS agencies sponsored six programs to educate producers and 
veterinarians about appropriate antibiotic use, the last of which 
ended in 2010 (see table 5). For example, from 2001 through 2010 CDC 
funded "Get Smart: Know When Antibiotics Work on the Farm"--also 
called Get Smart on the Farm--an outreach program that sponsored state-
based producer education activities to promote appropriate antibiotic 
use. CDC officials told us that this was one of the first major 
education efforts to bring together stakeholders from the public 
health, veterinary, and agricultural communities to discuss the issue 
of appropriate antibiotic use. Through the Get Smart on the Farm 
program, CDC hosted three national animal health conferences designed 
to foster partnerships between these stakeholders. These conferences 
included discussions of antibiotic use and resistance in animals. Get 
Smart on the Farm also funded the development of an online curriculum 
for veterinary students on antibiotic resistance and appropriate use, 
which became available in December 2010. CDC officials told us that 
the agency is planning to take an advisory rather than leadership role 
in future appropriate use education efforts because they believe that 
FDA and USDA are the appropriate agencies for leading such efforts. 
CDC reported that it spent approximately $1.7 million on Get Smart on 
the Farm activities from 2003 through 2010. Both CDC and FDA officials 
said that the impact of their education activities had not been 
assessed. HHS officials also said that they currently do not have 
plans to develop new activities in the future. 

Table 5: HHS Education Activities Related to Appropriate Antibiotic 
Use from 2001-2011: 

Agency(s): FDA, CDC, NIH; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: Consumer Education and Outreach Program; 
Project year(s): 2002-2010; 
Description of the project: National Foundation for Infectious 
Diseases Annual Conference on Antimicrobial Resistance, which included 
a public comment meeting on the 2001 interagency plan each year on the 
last day of the conference. 

Agency(s): FDA, CDC; 
Grantee(s): American Veterinary Medical Association; 
Project title: Veterinarian Education and Outreach; 
Project year(s): 2002-2006; 
Description of the project: Four species-specific booklets that 
explain appropriate antibiotic use principles were published and 
distributed to veterinarians; two videos on appropriate use were also 
produced for veterinary schools. 

Agency(s): CDC; 
Grantee(s): 11 states: CO, GA, IA, MI, MN, NE, OH, PA, SC, TN, WA; 
Project title: Get Smart on the Farm: State and Producer Outreach; 
Project year(s): 2001-2010; 
Description of the project: Sponsored three national animal health 
conferences where antibiotic resistance and use issues were discussed 
and funded and developed state-based educational programs to promote 
appropriate antibiotic use. 

Agency(s): CDC; 
Grantee(s): Michigan State University and University of Minnesota; 
Project title: Get Smart on the Farm: Antimicrobial Resistance 
Learning Site; 
Project year(s): A2001-2010; 
Description of the project: An online curriculum with pharmacology, 
microbiology, public health, and species-specific modules. 

Agency(s): CDC, FDA, APHIS, FSIS, NIFA; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: American Veterinary Medical Association Steering 
Committee on Antimicrobial Resistance; 
Project year(s): 2001-2005; 
Description of the project: Species-specific antibiotic judicious use 
principles were developed and published for veterinarians and 
producers. 

Agency(s): FDA, USDA; 
Grantee(s): University of California-Davis; 
Project title: Producer Education Program; 
Project year(s): 2002-2005; 
Description of the project: Sponsored university-based program that 
educated producers on antibiotic resistance issues; education 
materials were distributed to producers by Web-based programs and CD-
ROM. 

Source: GAO analysis of agency data. 

[End of table] 

USDA: 

USDA agencies also sponsored education programs addressing appropriate 
antibiotic use in animals (see table 6). For example, from 2002 
through 2005, USDA agencies worked with FDA to fund university-based 
programs that sought to educate producers on animal health issues, 
including antibiotic resistance. From 2006 through 2010 USDA agencies 
did not report any activities under this action item in the annual 
reports published by the interagency task force. However, officials 
noted that education on appropriate antibiotic use remains a priority 
and that during these years USDA gave presentations at scientific 
meetings and universities on this topic. USDA officials said the 
impact of these education efforts was not assessed. 

Table 6: USDA Education Activities Related to Appropriate Antibiotic 
Use from 2001-2011: 

Agency(s): APHIS; 
Grantee(s): Iowa State University; 
Project title: Antibiotic Resistance Continuing Education Learning 
Module; 
Project year(s): 2011-2012; 
Description of the project: 1 of 19 modules that veterinarians may 
complete in order to maintain their National Veterinary Accreditation 
Program accreditation. Expected to be complete and fully integrated 
into the accreditation program by June 2012. 

Agency(s): CDC, FDA, APHIS, FSIS, NIFA; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: American Veterinary Medical Association Steering 
Committee on Antimicrobial Resistance; 
Project year(s): 2001-2005; 
Description of the project: Species-specific antibiotic judicious use 
principles were developed and published for veterinarians and 
producers. 

Agency(s): FDA, USDA; 
Grantee(s): University of California-Davis; 
Project title: Producer Education Program; 
Project year(s): 2002-2005; 
Description of the project: Sponsored university-based program that 
educated producers on antibiotic resistance issues; 
education materials were distributed to producers by web-based 
programs and CD-ROM. 

Source: GAO analysis of agency data. 

[End of table] 

The one ongoing USDA appropriate antibiotic use education activity is 
an APHIS-funded training module on antibiotic resistance currently 
under development at a cost of $70,400. According to agency officials, 
the module will be similar to CDC's online curriculum for veterinary 
students. It will be 1 of 19 continuing education modules for the 
National Veterinary Accreditation Program, which is designed to train 
veterinarians to assist the federal government with animal health and 
regulatory services. The program requires participating veterinarians 
to periodically renew their accreditations by completing continuing 
education modules online or at conferences, and participants may elect 
which APHIS-approved modules to take in order to fulfill their 
requirements. Since the APHIS module will be similar to CDC's online 
curriculum for veterinary students, APHIS officials told us that they 
will look at CDC's content to determine whether or not to incorporate 
it into the APHIS-funded module. APHIS officials also told us that 
they sought out representatives from NIFA, FDA, CDC, the American 
Veterinary Medical Association, and academic institutions to review 
the module's content, and expect the training to be available for 
veterinarians by June 2012. APHIS officials told us that the module on 
appropriate antibiotic use is not within the National Veterinary 
Accreditation Program's traditional scope of work. More specifically, 
APHIS officials are unsure how they would measure the impact of the 
module because, unlike the other modules in the accreditation program, 
it is not based on any APHIS regulatory information that can be 
tracked. That said, officials told us providing antibiotic use 
education is beneficial and will increase practitioners' awareness in 
this area. After the completion of the antibiotic use module, USDA 
officials said they have no plans to develop new education activities. 

Additional USDA-funded education activities on appropriate antibiotic 
use may be conducted through local extension programs. Each U.S. state 
and territory has a Cooperative Extension office at its land-grant 
university,[Footnote 11] as well as a network of local or regional 
extension offices staffed by one or more experts who provide research- 
based information to agricultural producers, small business owners, 
youth, consumers, and others in local communities. NIFA provides 
federal funding to the extension system, though states and counties 
also contribute to the program. NIFA provides program leadership and 
seeks to help the system identify and address current agriculture- 
related issues. Two producers told us that extension programs are a 
helpful source of information about animal health issues. For example, 
they said that extension agents are very helpful in disseminating 
information, though their impact may be difficult to measure. In 
addition, they told us that when producers are successful with a 
preventative practice suggested by an extension agent, neighboring 
producers may notice and also make similar modifications, creating a 
multiplier effect. Two current extension agents also told us they have 
received inquiries from producers about antibiotic use, although these 
questions are not necessarily framed as appropriate use. NIFA 
officials told us that federally funded extension institutions submit 
an annual plan of work and an annual accomplishment report that 
provides a general overview of their yearly planned projects based on 
USDA priorities, but these plans are broad in nature and often do not 
provide details that allow NIFA to track efforts related to antibiotic 
use. 

Producer and Veterinary Organizations' Perspectives on Federal 
Education Efforts: 

Representatives from most of the producer and veterinary organizations 
that we spoke with said that industry-led efforts are responsible for 
most of the progress made in educating producers and veterinarians in 
the last 10 years. For example, the National Cattlemen's Beef 
Association, National Milk Producers' Federation, and National Pork 
Board have each developed Quality Assurance programs that advise 
producers on their views of proper antibiotic use during production. 
Representatives from most of the organizations we spoke with said that 
the federal government should have some type of role in educating 
producers and veterinarians on appropriate antibiotic use, but many-- 
including representatives from all of the producer organizations--said 
that they believe that these activities should be done in 
collaboration with industry. Representatives from most of the 
veterinary and producer organizations also said the federal government 
could improve collaboration with industry members and groups, and 
representatives from one veterinary organization pointed to previous 
federal education efforts to collect and disseminate information about 
avian influenza as collaborative education efforts federal agencies 
could model for appropriate use messages.[Footnote 12] Representatives 
from this organization noted that such efforts included the federal 
government and other industry stakeholders working together and 
disseminating education messages to the public. They also suggested 
that similar efforts between the federal government, producers, and 
researchers could be used to educate the industry about appropriate 
use of antibiotics in food animals. 

Regulation of Antibiotics in the EU and Denmark May Offer Lessons for 
the United States: 

Since 1995, the EU and Denmark have taken a variety of actions to 
regulate antibiotic use in food animals and mitigate the risk such use 
may pose to humans. Denmark is part of the EU and complies with EU 
policies but has also taken some additional actions independently. 
Some of the experiences in the EU and Denmark may be useful for U.S. 
government officials and producers, though U.S. producers face 
different animal health challenges and regulatory requirements than 
European producers. 

EU and Denmark Have Taken Action to Regulate Antibiotic Use in Food 
Animals: 

From 1995 to 2006, both the EU and Danish governments took a variety 
of actions to regulate antibiotic use in food animals (see figure 2). 
In 1995, Denmark banned the use of avoparcin for growth promotion in 
food animals, and an EU-wide ban followed in 1997. Avoparcin is 
similar to the human medicine vancomycin, and some studies suggested 
that avoparcin use in food animals could be contributing to vancomycin-
resistant bacteria in humans.[Footnote 13] Both Denmark and the EU 
followed up with bans on several additional growth promotion 
antibiotics, culminating in a total ban on growth promotion 
antibiotics in 2000 and 2006, respectively. Government and industry 
officials we spoke with in Denmark emphasized that their bans on 
growth promotion antibiotics began as voluntary industry efforts that 
were later implemented as regulations by the government. 

Figure 2: EU and Denmark Actions to Regulate Antibiotic Use in Food 
Animals, 1994-2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated timeline] 

1995: 
Denmark actions: 
* Limited the amount that veterinarians can profit on sales of 
antibiotics; 
* Ban on growth promotion uses of avoparcin. 

1997: 
EU actions, Original EU member states: 
* Ban on growth promotion uses of avoparcin. 

1998: 
Denmark actions: 
* Ban on virginiamycin and all growth promotion antibiotics for 
cattle, broiler chickens, and finisher swine. 

1999: 
EU actions, Original EU member states: 
* Ban on growth promotion uses of the following antibiotics: tylosin,
spiramycin, bacitracin, virginiamycin, carbadox, and olaquindox. 

2000: 
Denmark actions: 
* Ban on growth promotion antibiotics for pigs at weaning. 

2002: 
Denmark actions: 
* Ban on use of fluoroquinolones in swine except as drug of last 
resort for resistant infections. 

2005: 
Denmark actions: 
* Increased oversight of swine veterinarians by regulatory officials
at the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. 

2006: 
EU actions, New EU member states 2004: 
* Ban on all remaining antibiotics used for growth promotion. 

2007: 
Denmark actions: 
* Veterinarian oversight expanded to all food animal veterinarians. 

2010: 
Denmark actions: 
* Yellow card initiative creates regulatory limits for antibiotic use 
on swine farms. 

Sources: GAO analysis of EU and Denmark data; Map Resources (maps). 

[End of figure] 

EU officials and both industry and government officials from Denmark 
said the most important factor in the development of their policies 
was sustained consumer interest in the issue of antibiotic use in food 
animals and concerns that such use could cause resistance affecting 
humans. In the face of these concerns, officials explained that EU 
policies were developed based in part on the precautionary principle, 
which states that where there are threats of serious or irreversible 
damage, lack of scientific certainty should not postpone cost-
effective measures to reduce risks to humans. Danish industry 
officials added that, as new data and knowledge arise, it is 
appropriate to reevaluate the measures taken to reduce risks. We have 
previously reported that the EU made other food safety decisions based 
on the precautionary principle, including decisions about inspecting 
imports of live animal and animal products, such as meat, milk, and 
fish.[Footnote 14] 

According to Danish government officials, Denmark has implemented two 
additional types of regulations regarding antibiotic use in food 
animals. First, Denmark has increased government oversight of 
veterinarians and producers. For example, in 1995, Denmark limited the 
amount that veterinarians could profit on sales of antibiotics. Then, 
in 2005, Denmark implemented policies requiring biannual audits of 
veterinarians who serve the swine industry, which Danish government 
officials said uses about 80 percent of all food animal antibiotics in 
Denmark. Government officials said these audits increase 
veterinarians' awareness of their antibiotic prescription patterns. In 
2007 the audits were expanded to cover all food animal veterinarians. 
Most recently, in 2010, Denmark developed a new system--called the 
yellow card initiative--which sets regulatory limits on antibiotic use 
based on the size of swine farms. Swine farms exceeding their 
regulatory limit are subject to increased monitoring by government 
officials, which they must pay for. Danish government officials 
explained that the yellow card initiative is different from their past 
oversight efforts in that it targets producers rather than 
veterinarians. Second, according to Danish government officials, 
Denmark developed a policy to reduce veterinary use of antibiotics 
classified as critically important to human medicine by WHO, which 
like FDA, has a ranking of such antibiotics. For example, in 2002 
Denmark limited veterinary prescriptions of fluoroquinolones to cases 
in which testing showed that no other antibiotic would be effective at 
treating the disease. In addition, veterinarians prescribing 
fluoroquinolones to food animals would need to notify government 
regulatory officials. 

EU and Denmark Experiences Suggest Possible Lessons for the United 
States: 

U.S. producers face different animal health challenges and regulatory 
requirements than producers in the EU and Denmark, making it difficult 
to determine how effectively similar policies could be implemented in 
the United States. Specifically, industry officials in Denmark 
explained that several diseases that affect producers in the United 
States are no longer active in Denmark. For example, broiler chicken 
producers in Denmark spent many years improving their biosecurity and 
successfully eradicated Salmonella, which can cause disease both in 
broiler chickens and in humans, and Danish cattle producers do not 
have to worry about brucellosis, which has not been seen in Denmark in 
decades. Similarly, the regulatory environment in the EU differs from 
that in the United States. For example, EU countries develop and 
implement policies using the precautionary principle. In addition, the 
EU and Denmark both require prescriptions for the use of most 
antibiotics in animals, but the United States requires them in certain 
limited circumstances. Officials from HHS and USDA said they are aware 
of other countries' efforts to regulate antibiotic use in food animals 
and participate in international conferences and meetings addressing 
these issues. Based on the experiences in the EU and Denmark, there 
are several lessons that may be useful for U.S. government officials 
and producers. 

Denmark's Antibiotic Use Data Allowed Officials to Track How Policy 
Changes Affected Use in Food Animals and Take Appropriate Response: 

According to Danish government officials, Denmark's antibiotic use 
data are detailed enough to allow the country to track trends in use 
and monitor the effects of their policies. Specifically, data show 
that antibiotic use in food animals declined from 1994 to 1999, but 
then it increased modestly from 1999 to 2009, while remaining below 
1994 levels (see figure 3). The decline coincides with the start of 
the changes to government policies on growth promotion and 
veterinarian sales profits. Danish industry and government officials 
noted some of the increase in antibiotic use over the last decade may 
be in response to disease outbreaks on swine farms. Danish government 
officials also mentioned, however, that the government instituted the 
2010 yellow card initiative to reverse the recent increase in 
antibiotic use. According to these officials, antibiotic use in pig 
production fell 25 percent from June 2010 to June 2011 in response to 
the implementation of the yellow card initiative. 

Figure 3: Antibiotic Use in Swine in Denmark 1994-2010: 

[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph] 

Milligrams of antibiotic consumed per kilogram of pork produced: 

Year: 1994; 
Therapeutic Use: 40; 
Growth Promotion (Estimated): 58.6. 

Year: 1995; 
Therapeutic Use: 21.3; 
Growth Promotion (Estimated): 51.2. 

Year: 1996; 
Therapeutic Use: 21.7; 
Growth Promotion (Estimated): 59.1. 

Year: 1997; 
Therapeutic Use: 22.4; 
Growth Promotion (Estimated): 58.8. 

Year: 1998; 
Therapeutic Use: 22.3; 
Growth Promotion (Estimated): 26.6. 

Year: 1999; 
Therapeutic Use: 24.8; 
Growth Promotion (Estimated): 6.5. 

Year: 2000; 
Therapeutic Use: 34.4. 

Year: 2001; 
Therapeutic Use: 38.5. 

Year: 2002; 
Therapeutic Use: 38.1. 

Year: 2003; 
Therapeutic Use: 40.3. 
Year: 2004; 
Therapeutic Use: 45.1. 

Year: 2005; 
Therapeutic Use: 46. 

Year: 2006; 
Therapeutic Use: 46. 

Year: 2007; 
Therapeutic Use: 47. 

Year: 2008; 
Therapeutic Use: 48.9. 

Year: 2009; 
Therapeutic Use: 54.6. 

Year: 2010; 
Therapeutic Use: 50.9. 

Source: DANMAP data provided by Danish officials. 

Note: Between 1994 and 1999, Denmark collected data on the use of 
growth promotion antibiotics in aggregate, rather than by species. 
DANMAP officials estimated growth promotion antibiotic use in swine 
based on information from feed mills about the amount of feed sold and 
the types of growth promotion antibiotics included in the feed for the 
different food animal species. 

[End of figure] 

Denmark Resistance Data Showed Reductions in Food Animals and Retail 
Meat in Most Instances: 

According to Danish officials, Danish data on antibiotic resistance in 
food animals and retail meat show reductions in resistance after 
policy changes in most instances. Specifically, Danish government 
officials have tracked resistance to antibiotics banned for growth 
promotion among Enterococcus bacteria since the mid-1990s. 
Enterococcus are commonly found in the intestinal tract of humans and 
food animals, making them relatively easy to track over time, though 
they rarely cause disease. Officials said that the percentage of 
Enterococcus from food animals that are resistant to antibiotics 
banned for growth promotion has decreased since the bans were 
implemented. Officials also mentioned declines in resistance among 
Campylobacter bacteria (which can cause foodborne illness in humans) 
from food animals and retail meat. For example, officials said that 
resistance to the critically important class of drugs called 
macrolides has decreased in Campylobacter bacteria from swine. 
However, Danish industry and government officials cautioned that the 
association between antibiotic use and resistance is not 
straightforward. For example, despite restrictions on veterinary use 
of the critically important fluoroquinolone antibiotics since 2002, 
Danish resistance data have not shown a decrease in fluoroquinolone-
resistant bacteria from food animals. Danish industry officials 
explained that restrictions on fluoroquinolone use in swine were 
implemented before fluoroquinolone resistance became pronounced in 
Denmark and that current rates of fluoroquinolone-resistant Salmonella 
in Danish pork are lower than for pork imported into Denmark. 

Denmark Resistance Data Have Not Shown Decrease in Human Resistance, 
Except in Certain Instances: 

Danish officials told us that Denmark's resistance data have not shown 
a decrease in antibiotic resistance in humans after implementation of 
the various Danish policies, except for a few limited examples. 
Specifically, officials said that the prevalence of vancomycin- 
resistant Enterococcus faecium from humans has decreased since 
avoparcin was banned for use in animals in 1995. Resistance has been 
tracked for other types of bacteria and antibiotics, but similar 
declines have not been seen. Danish government officials explained 
that, in addition to antibiotic use in food animals, there are other 
important contributors to antibiotic resistance in humans, including 
human antibiotic use, consumption of imported meat (which may contain 
more antibiotic-resistant bacteria than Danish meat), and acquisition 
of resistant bacteria while traveling. Danish officials told us their 
data collection systems are not designed to gather information about 
whether human deaths from antibiotic resistance have fallen after the 
implementation of risk management policies. Officials mentioned a 
challenge to this type of data collection is that "antibiotic 
resistance" is not listed on death certificates as the cause of death; 
generally, as in the United States, the cause of death would be listed 
as multiple organ failure, making it difficult to identify deaths 
caused by antibiotic-resistant infections. 

Danish Policies Do Not Appear To Have Led To an Increase in Bacteria 
That Cause Foodborne Illness: 

Denmark has also tracked the prevalence of bacteria that cause human 
foodborne illness on retail meat products, according to Danish 
industry officials. Producer organizations in the United States have 
expressed concerns that reductions in antibiotic use may lead to an 
increase in foodborne pathogens on meat, but industry officials in 
Denmark said that their data show no increase in the rates of these 
bacteria on meat products. These officials said, however, that several 
changes to management practices in slaughter plants may have helped 
ensure rates of foodborne pathogens on meat remained low. For example, 
these officials said Danish slaughter plants now use a flash-freezing 
technique--called blast chilling--that freezes the outer layer of an 
animal carcass, reducing the number of bacteria on the meat and even 
killing most Campylobacter. 

Danish Policies Affected Poultry and Swine Producers Differently: 

Danish producers and veterinary officials noted that the policies were 
easier for poultry producers to implement than for swine producers. 
Poultry producers had made changes to their production practices 
throughout the 1990s to eradicate Salmonella from their flocks, and 
these practices also helped maintain flock health without routine 
antibiotic use. In contrast, swine producers faced difficulties 
weaning piglets without antibiotics, reporting both an increase in 
mortality and a reduction in daily weight gain shortly after the ban. 
However, Danish industry officials explained that swine producers 
implemented multiple changes to production practices that enabled them 
to comply with the ban. These production practices included improved 
genetic selection, later weaning, improved diet, increased space per 
piglet, and improved flooring. Industry officials explained that such 
changes in production practices did have real costs to the industry. 
For example, weaning piglets later increases the time between litters 
and reduces the overall number of piglets produced annually. Despite 
these additional costs, however, Danish industry officials expressed 
pride in their ability to produce high-quality meat products while 
ensuring that they do not contribute unduly to the problem of 
antibiotic resistance. 

The EU Faces Challenges but Is Working To Collect Use and Resistance 
Data: 

EU officials told us that they rely on member states to collect data 
on antibiotic use. As of September 2010, 10 countries in Europe 
collected data on sales of antibiotics used in food animals, and 5 of 
these countries collected species-specific data.[Footnote 15] In 
addition, 12 other countries have recently started or planned to begin 
collecting antibiotic sales data.[Footnote 16] Among countries that 
currently collect use data, these data are collected using different 
methods, which complicates comparing them across countries. EU 
officials identified several challenges to collecting information 
about antibiotic use throughout the EU. Specifically, identifying 
sources of detailed information about antibiotic use is difficult 
because EU countries have different distribution systems for 
veterinary medicines and therefore collect this information in varying 
ways. For example, in Denmark, such data are collected from veterinary 
pharmacies, but not all EU countries require animal antibiotics to be 
dispensed through pharmacies. In addition, EU countries vary in the 
extent to which veterinary prescriptions are monitored electronically, 
making it difficult to track prescriptions consistently throughout the 
EU. 

Despite these challenges, EU officials emphasized the importance of 
gathering data on antibiotic use in food animals for two reasons. 
First, they noted that tracking antibiotic use data allows governments 
to evaluate the effects of their risk management policies. Second, 
they mentioned that data on both antibiotic use and antibiotic 
resistance are needed in order to fully understand how use in animals 
is related to resistance in humans. Given the importance of collecting 
data, the EU has begun a pilot project to collect comparable 
antibiotic use data throughout the EU. The first phase will use a 
standard instrument to collect, harmonize, and analyze data on sales 
of veterinary antibiotics from countries that agree to participate. EU 
officials said that a report on sales of veterinary medicines, 
covering nine European countries, will be available in September 2011. 
EU officials said that subsequent phases will include more detailed 
data about species and purpose of use. They emphasized the importance 
of going beyond bulk sales data, noting that it is necessary to report 
antibiotic use in the context of the number of animals being treated 
or the pounds of meat produced, since it can allow for comparisons 
between EU countries as well as comparisons to human antibiotic use. 
EU officials said that the Danish system uses this type of data 
collection, and that WHO is working on developing guidance for how to 
create such data collection systems. 

For resistance data, EU officials told us that the EU has been 
collecting information from numerous member countries and working to 
improve the comparability of the data between countries. In 2006, the 
EU produced its first report for data gathered in 2004, collating 
information from 26 individual countries. However, EU officials said 
that resistance data cannot currently be compared across countries or 
aggregated to provide conclusions about the entire EU, though 
officials are in the process of developing a report that will provide 
EU-wide information. Instead, officials pointed to trends identified 
in particular member countries. For example, officials noted a 
decrease in resistance in Enterococcus from broiler chickens after 
avoparcin was banned for growth promotion uses in Germany, the 
Netherlands, and Italy. Officials also mentioned similar declines in 
resistance among Enterococcus from healthy humans in Germany and the 
Netherlands. 

Moreover, in addition to their data collection efforts on antibiotic 
use in food animals and antibiotic resistance in humans, meat, and 
food animals, the EU also conducts periodic baseline surveys to 
determine the prevalence of particular drug-resistant bacteria 
throughout all countries in the EU. EU officials said these baseline 
studies provide information that is comparable across countries. EU 
officials explained that EU countries are required to participate in 
these studies, which usually last 1 year and are used to set reduction 
targets for regulatory programs or to develop risk management 
measures. For example, in 2008 the EU conducted a prevalence study of 
MRSA in swine herds. It determined that the prevalence varied 
dramatically between member countries--it was found in more than 50 
percent of swine herds in Spain, but in eight other EU countries there 
were no detections. 

Denmark and EU Officials Emphasized Industry Role in Research: 

According to Danish government and industry officials we interviewed, 
the Danish government does not conduct research on alternatives to 
antibiotic use. Both industry and government officials agreed that it 
should be government's role to set regulatory policy and industry's 
role to conduct research on how to meet regulatory goals. The Danish 
Agriculture and Food Council--an industry organization representing 
producers of a variety of meat and agricultural products--has funded 
several studies examining alternatives to growth promotion 
antibiotics. For example, one such study examined the economics of 
five types of products that had the potential to improve feed 
efficiency in swine without leading to antibiotic resistance and found 
that few products were both economical for farmers and successful in 
improving feed efficiency. 

EU officials also reported that at the EU-level government does not 
conduct a significant amount of research related to alternatives to 
antibiotics. They noted, however, that the EU has been trying to 
incentivize private industry to develop alternatives in other ways. 
For example, EU officials have tried to spur pharmaceutical companies 
to develop products to improve feed efficiency and growth by 
lengthening patents on such products. EU officials said that this 
results in a reduction in competition from generic manufacturers and 
has led to more than 300 applications for new feed additive products. 

Conclusions: 

Antibiotic resistance is a growing public health problem worldwide, 
and any use of antibiotics--in humans or animals--can lead to the 
development of resistance. In 2001, USDA and HHS agencies took steps 
to coordinate their actions on surveillance, prevention and control of 
resistance, research, and product development through the 2001 
interagency plan. The surveillance focus area of this plan includes 
action items related to improving efforts to monitor both antibiotic 
use in food animals, as well as antibiotic resistance in food animals 
and in retail meat. According to WHO, populations sampled for 
surveillance purposes should normally be representative of the total 
population--in this case, food animals and retail meat in the United 
States. 

Since 2001, however, USDA and HHS agencies have made limited progress 
in improving data collection on antibiotic use and resistance. For 
example, although FDA has a new effort to collect data on antibiotics 
sold for use in food animals, these data lack crucial details, such as 
the species in which the antibiotics are used and the purpose for 
their use. The 2001 interagency plan states such data are essential 
for interpreting trends and variations in rates of resistance, 
improving the understanding of the relationship between antibiotic use 
and resistance, and identifying interventions to prevent and control 
resistance. In addition, two USDA agencies collect data on antibiotic 
use from food animal producers, but data from these surveys provide 
only a snapshot of antibiotic use practices and cannot be used to 
examine trends. Collecting data on antibiotic use in food animals can 
be challenging and costly, but without an approach to collecting more 
detailed data, USDA and HHS cannot track the effectiveness of policies 
they undertake to curb resistance. Indeed, FDA currently does not have 
a plan to measure the effectiveness of its voluntary strategy to 
reduce food animal use of antibiotics that are medically important to 
humans. Although there are challenges to collecting detailed data on 
antibiotic use, efforts are under way in the EU to begin collecting 
such data. 

For data on antibiotic resistance, HHS and USDA agencies have 
leveraged existing programs to collect samples of bacteria, but the 
resulting data are not representative of antibiotic resistance in food 
animals and retail meat throughout the United States. According to the 
2001 interagency plan, antibiotic resistance data will allow agencies 
to detect resistance trends and improve their understanding of the 
relationship between use and resistance. FDA is aware of the NARMS 
sampling limitations and has included a strategic goal of making NARMS 
sampling more representative and applicable to trend analysis in its 
draft 2011-2015 NARMS Strategic Plan. FDA officials mentioned several 
ways that NARMS sampling could be improved, such as discontinuing 
slaughter plant sampling in favor of an on-farm sampling program and 
increasing the number of states participating in the retail meat 
program. 

USDA and HHS have also undertaken some research related to developing 
alternatives to current antibiotic use practices. However, the extent 
of these research efforts is unclear, as neither USDA nor HHS has 
assessed its research efforts to determine the progress made toward 
the related action item in the 2001 interagency plan. In addition, 
officials from most of the veterinary and several public health 
organizations we spoke with said that the federal government should 
make greater efforts to coordinate this research with the food animal 
industry. Without an assessment of past research efforts and 
coordination with industry, USDA and HHS may be limited in their 
ability to identify gaps where additional research is needed. In 
addition, USDA and HHS managers may not have the critical information 
they need to make decisions about future research efforts. Focus on 
tracking progress and making sound decisions about future research is 
particularly important in light of the fiscal pressures currently 
facing the federal government. Nevertheless, the draft 2010 
interagency plan includes an action item on researching alternatives, 
but it does not identify steps the agencies intend to take to do so. 
Similarly, USDA and HHS had sought to educate producers and 
veterinarians about appropriate antibiotic use but did not assess 
their efforts. The one remaining education activity, however, is a 
$70,400 USDA training module on antibiotic resistance for 
veterinarians, which will be completed in 2012, after which there are 
no plans to develop new education activities. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

We are making the following three recommendations: 

* To track the effectiveness of policies to curb antibiotic 
resistance, including FDA's voluntary strategy designed to reduce 
antibiotic use in food animals and to address action items in the 
surveillance focus area of the 2001 interagency plan, we recommend the 
Secretaries of Agriculture and Health and Human Services direct 
agencies to, consistent with their existing authorities, (1) identify 
potential approaches for collecting detailed data on antibiotic use in 
food animals, including the species in which antibiotics are used and 
the purpose for their use, as well as the costs, time frames, and 
potential trade-offs associated with each approach; (2) collaborate 
with industry to select the best approach; (3) seek any resources 
necessary to implement the approach; and (4) use the data to assess 
the effectiveness of policies to curb antibiotic resistance. 

* To enhance surveillance of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in food 
animals, we recommend that the Secretaries of Agriculture and Health 
and Human Services direct agencies to, consistent with their existing 
authorities, modify NARMS sampling to make the data more 
representative of antibiotic resistance in food animals and retail 
meat throughout the United States. 

* To better focus future federal research efforts on alternatives to 
current antibiotic use practices, we recommend that the Secretaries of 
Agriculture and Health and Human Services direct agencies to (1) 
assess previous research efforts on alternatives and identify gaps 
where additional research is needed, in collaboration with the animal 
production industry, and (2) specify steps in the draft 2010 
interagency plan that agencies will take to fill those gaps. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided the Departments of Agriculture and Health and Human 
Services a draft of this report for review and comment. Both 
departments agreed with our recommendations and provided written 
comments on the draft, which are summarized below and appear in their 
entirety in appendixes VII and VIII, respectively, of this report. The 
departments also provided technical comments, which we incorporated as 
appropriate. 

In its comments, USDA agreed with our recommendations. In response to 
our recommendation on collecting antibiotic use data, USDA noted that 
the department has devised strategies to collect detailed information 
on antibiotic use in food animals, as documented in "A USDA Plan to 
Address Antimicrobial Resistance." Our report discusses many of the 
ongoing USDA activities described in the document, including NAHMS, 
ARMS, and NARMS. In commenting on our recommendation to collect more 
representative resistance data, USDA acknowledged that sampling for 
antibiotic resistant bacteria in food animals is not currently 
conducted on a nationally representative population, but also stated 
that NARMS data can still be used to examine general trends. We 
continue to believe that the nonrandom sampling method used for food 
animals in NARMS results in data that are not representative of food 
animals across the country and cannot be used for trend analysis. 
Moreover, as our report states, the NARMS program has prioritized 
modifying animal sampling to overcome its current biases, and both FDA 
and USDA have identified efforts that could be used to improve NARMS 
food animal sampling. In its letter, USDA identified several such 
efforts; we had included several of these in the draft report, and we 
modified the final version to include the remaining effort. 

In its comments, HHS also agreed with our recommendations, but stated 
that FDA has made substantial progress and taken an active and 
deliberative role in addressing the controversial and complex issue of 
antibiotic use in food animals. We acknowledge that FDA has taken many 
actions, most of which are discussed in the report. However, as our 
report states, since the 2001 interagency plan, USDA and HHS agencies 
have made limited progress in improving data collection on antibiotic 
use and resistance. Specifically, as we noted in our report, FDA's 
data on sales of antibiotics for animal use do not include information 
on the species in which antibiotics are used or the purpose for their 
use, which, for example, prevents agencies from interpreting trends 
and variations in rates of resistance. Similarly, as our report 
states, data on antibiotic resistance from food animals are not 
representative and cannot be used for trend analysis--even though the 
2001 interagency plan identified detecting resistance trends as an 
important part of monitoring for antibiotic resistance. In commenting 
on our recommendation regarding antibiotic use data collection, FDA 
recognized that having more detailed antibiotic use data would benefit 
its overall effort to assure the judicious use of antibiotics. FDA 
also noted that it is exploring potential approaches for obtaining 
more detailed information and that it plans to coordinate with USDA in 
that effort. We modified our report to include this information. In 
addition, regarding our findings on FDA's resistance data from retail 
meat, FDA stated that it does not believe samples need to be 
statistically representative of the entire United States to serve as 
indicators of U.S. retail meat. We modified our report to better 
reflect FDA's position, but as our report states, the FDA Science 
Advisory Board's 2007 review of data on antibiotic resistance in 
retail meat found that the lack of a national sampling strategy limits 
a broader interpretation of NARMS data. 

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies to the 
appropriate congressional committees, Secretaries of Agriculture and 
Health and Human Services, and other interested parties. In addition, 
this report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff members have any questions about this report, 
please contact me at (202) 512-3841 or shamesl@gao.gov. Contact points 
for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be 
found on the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major 
contributions to this report are listed in appendix IX. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 

Lisa Shames: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

The objectives of our review were to determine (1) the extent to which 
federal agencies have collected data on antibiotic use and resistance 
in food animals; (2) the actions the Food and Drug Administration 
(FDA) has taken to mitigate the risk of antibiotic resistance in 
humans as a result of antibiotic use in food animals; (3) the extent 
to which federal agencies have conducted research on alternatives to 
current antibiotic use practices and educated producers and 
veterinarians about appropriate antibiotic use; and (4) what actions 
the European Union (EU) and an EU member country, Denmark, have taken 
to regulate antibiotic use in food animals and what lessons, if any, 
have been learned. 

To address the first three objectives of our study, we reviewed 
federal laws, regulations, policies, and guidance; federal plans about 
antibiotic resistance; agency documents related to data collection 
efforts on antibiotic use and resistance; and documents from 
international organizations and other countries related to 
surveillance of animal antibiotic use and resistance. In particular, 
we reviewed the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (2008 Farm 
Bill), as well as laws related to FDA's oversight of animal 
antibiotics, including the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, the 
Animal Drug Availability Act of 1996, the Animal Drug User Fee Act of 
2003. We also reviewed regulations and guidance implementing FDA's 
authorities, including Evaluating the Safety of Antimicrobial New 
Animal Drugs with Regard to Their Microbiological Effects on Bacteria 
of Human Health Concern (Guidance for Industry #152), and The 
Judicious Use of Medically Important Antimicrobial Drugs in Food-
Producing Animals (draft Guidance for Industry #209). In addition, we 
reviewed the 2001 Interagency Public Health Action Plan to Combat 
Antimicrobial Resistance, the draft 2010 Interagency Public Health 
Action Plan to Combat Antimicrobial Resistance, and agencies' annual 
updates of activities they completed related to these plans. We also 
reviewed agency documents related to FDA's sales data, the National 
Animal Health Monitoring System (NAHMS), the Agricultural Resource 
Management Survey (ARMS), the National Antimicrobial Resistance 
Monitoring System (NARMS), and the now-defunct pilot Collaboration on 
Animal Health and Food Safety Epidemiology (CAHFSE). Internationally, 
we reviewed documents from surveillance systems in Canada and Denmark, 
including reports about the Canadian Integrated Program on 
Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance (CIPARS) and the Danish 
Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring and Research Programme (DANMAP). 
In addition, we reviewed the World Health Organization's guidance on 
developing surveillance systems for antibiotic resistance related to 
food animal antibiotic use. 

To discuss topics related to the first three objectives, we also 
conducted interviews with officials at the Department of Health and 
Human Services' (HHS) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
(CDC), FDA, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and U.S. 
Department of Agriculture (USDA) agency officials at the Animal and 
Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), the Agricultural Research 
Service (ARS), the Economic Research Service (ERS), the Food Safety 
and Inspection Service (FSIS), and the National Institute of Food and 
Agriculture (NIFA). We also interviewed an official representing 
CIPARS to discuss the program's efforts to monitor antibiotic use and 
resistance in animals across Canada, the challenges it faces, and how 
the program may relate to current and future data collection efforts 
in the United States. 

We also conducted site visits with conventional and alternative 
(either organic or antibiotic-free) producers of poultry, cattle, 
swine, and dairy products in Delaware, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, 
Minnesota, and Wisconsin to obtain a better understanding of 
production practices and the types of antibiotic use data available at 
the farm level. During these site visits, we spoke with producers, 
veterinarians, academic researchers, and extension agents involved 
with food animal production. We selected these commodity groups 
because they represent the top four animal products in the United 
States. We selected our site visit locations based on the 
accessibility of production facilities of different sizes--we visited 
both small and large facilities; including states that are among the 
largest producers of each commodity in our scope of study; and 
proximity to Washington, D.C., and the USDA NARMS laboratory in 
Georgia. These sites were selected using a nonprobability sample and 
the findings from those visits cannot be generalized to other 
producers. 

Based on issues identified by reviewing documents and interviewing 
federal, state, and local officials, we developed a questionnaire on 
the use of antibiotics in animals and resistance. The questionnaire 
gathered organizations' perspectives on a range of topics including 
the extent to which federal data collection programs support the 
action items identified by federal agencies in the 2001 interagency 
plan; what actions, if any, FDA or other federal agencies should take 
to implement the two principles FDA outlined in draft Guidance for 
Industry #209 and how such implementation may affect antibiotic use in 
food animals; and what role, if any, the federal government should 
have in conducting research on alternatives to current antibiotic use 
practices and educating producers and veterinarians. We conducted a 
pretest of the questionnaire and made appropriate changes based on the 
pretest. 

In addition to developing the questionnaire, we identified 11 
organizations involved with the issue of antibiotic use in food 
animals and antibiotic resistance. We selected these organizations 
because of their expertise in topics surrounding antibiotic use in 
animals and resistance based on whether they have been actively 
involved in this issue within the past 5 years, including through 
testimonies to Congress, in-depth public discussions, or published 
research; and to provide representation across producer organizations 
that represent the major commodities, in addition to pharmaceutical 
and public health organizations. The selected organizations are a 
nonprobability sample, and their responses are not generalizable. The 
selected organizations were: National Cattleman's Beef Association, 
National Milk Producers' Federation, National Pork Producers Council, 
National Chicken Council, Animal Health Institute, Alliance for the 
Prudent Use of Antibiotics, Center for Science in the Public Interest, 
Infectious Diseases Society of America, Keep Antibiotics Working, PEW 
Campaign on Human Health and Industrial Farming, and Union of 
Concerned Scientists. 

We administered the questionnaires through structured interviews with 
representatives from the 11 national organizations, who spoke on 
behalf of their members, either via phone or in-person. All 11 
organizations agreed to participate in these structured interviews. To 
identify trends in responses, we qualitatively analyzed the open-ended 
responses from the interviews to provide insight into organizations' 
views on the issues identified in the questionnaire. 

We also conducted structured interviews with representatives from five 
national veterinary organizations, who spoke on behalf of their 
members, to discuss their views on federal research efforts on 
alternatives and federal efforts to educate producers and 
veterinarians about appropriate use. The questionnaire covered a range 
of topics including federal progress in both of these areas since 2001 
and actions the federal government can take to improve future efforts 
in these areas. We contacted five veterinary organizations to request 
their participation, selecting these organizations to include the 
largest U.S. veterinary organization--the American Veterinary Medical 
Association--as well as a veterinary organization representing each of 
the major commodities in our review--American Association of Avian 
Pathologists, American Association of Bovine Practitioners, American 
Association of Swine Veterinarians, and the Academy of Veterinary 
Consultants. We distributed the questionnaire to the five 
organizations electronically and administered the questionnaires 
through structured interviews with each organization via phone or in 
person. All five veterinary organizations agreed to participate in 
these structured interviews. To identify trends in responses, we 
qualitatively analyzed the open-ended responses from the interviews to 
provide insight into organizations' views on the issues identified in 
the questionnaire. Although we sought to include a variety of 
organizations with perspectives about antibiotic use and resistance, 
the views of organizations consulted should not be considered to 
represent all perspectives about these issues and are not 
generalizable. 

To describe actions the EU and Denmark have taken to regulate 
antibiotic use in food animals and potential lessons that have been 
learned from these actions, we reviewed documents, spoke with EU and 
Danish government and industry officials, and visited producers. We 
selected the EU and Denmark because they implemented bans on growth 
promotion uses of antibiotics in 2006 and 2000, respectively, which 
allows for a review of the effects of these policies in the years 
since. In addition, Denmark's experience with regulating antibiotic 
use has been well-documented in government-collected data that provide 
insight into the effects of policy changes. 

For the EU, we reviewed documents describing EU Commission directives 
and regulations regarding antibiotic use in food animals, risk 
assessments related to antibiotic use in food animals, surveillance 
reports describing antibiotic resistance in the EU, and proposals for 
future data collection efforts on antibiotic use. In addition, we 
spoke with officials from the EU Directorates General for Health and 
Consumers, Agriculture and Rural Development, and Research and 
Innovation. We also spoke with an official from the European Food 
Safety Agency regarding their surveillance reports describing 
antibiotic resistance in the EU. Finally, we interviewed the following 
organizations that interact with the EU on behalf of their members 
regarding animal antibiotic use: Federation of Veterinarians of 
Europe, which represents veterinarians throughout the EU, and the 
International Federation for Animal Health, which represents 
pharmaceutical companies who manufacture animal health products. We 
did not independently verify statements of EU law. 

For Denmark, we reviewed documents describing Danish laws and 
regulations regarding animal antibiotic use and government regulation 
of veterinarians, surveillance reports describing antibiotic use and 
antibiotic resistance in Denmark, and published studies examining 
Denmark's experience with regulating antibiotic use. In addition, we 
spoke with officials at the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration 
and DANMAP. We also spoke with officials at the Danish Agriculture and 
Food Council, which represents producers in Denmark, to learn about 
how Danish policies have affected producers. Finally, we conducted 
site visits and interviewed Danish producers and veterinarians at a 
poultry and a swine facility in Denmark to learn about current methods 
of production and how these producers have implemented Danish 
policies. These sites were selected based on convenience and the 
findings from those visits cannot be generalized to other producers. 
We did not independently verify statements of Danish law. 

We conducted this performance audit from August 2010 to September 
2011, in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Alternative Modes of Food Animal Production: 

Some producers raise animals using alternative modes of production. 
[Footnote 17] One such alternative is organic production, for which 
USDA's National Organic Program (NOP) develops, implements, and 
administers national standards. To comply with NOP standards, 
organically produced animals cannot be treated with antibiotics. 
According to USDA, organic farming has become one of the fastest- 
growing segments of U.S. agriculture, and consumer demand for 
organically produced goods has shown double-digit growth for well over 
a decade, providing market incentives for U.S. farmers across a broad 
range of commodities. According to recent industry statistics, organic 
sales account for over 3 percent of total U.S. food sales. Fruits and 
vegetables account for about 37 percent of U.S. organic food sales, 
while dairy and food animals (including meat, fish, and poultry) 
account for about 16 and 3 percent, respectively, of U.S. organic food 
sales. 

According to the Organic Trade Association, transitioning from 
conventional to organic production can take several years, because 
producers must adopt certain management practices to qualify for 
organic certification. The NOP standards apply to animals used for 
meat, milk, eggs, and other animal products represented as organically 
produced. Some of the NOP livestock standards include the following: 

* Animals for slaughter must be raised under organic management from 
the last third of gestation, or no later than the second day of life 
for poultry. 

* Producers generally must provide a total feed ration composed of 
agricultural products, but they may also provide allowed vitamin and 
mineral supplements. 

* Traditional livestock have transition periods for converting to 
organic. For example, producers may convert an entire distinct dairy 
herd to organic production by providing 80 percent organically 
produced feed for 9 months, followed by 3 months of 100 percent 
organically produced feed. If the farm did not convert an entire 
distinct herd, new animals added must be raised using organic methods 
for at least 1 year before the milk can be sold as organic. 

* Organically raised animals may not be given hormones to promote 
growth, or antibiotics for any reason. 

* All organically raised animals must have access to the outdoors, 
including access to pasture for ruminants, such as cattle. They may be 
temporarily confined only for specified reasons, including reasons of 
health, safety, the animal's stage of production, or to protect soil 
or water quality. 

* A USDA-approved certifier ensures that organic producers are 
following all of the rules necessary to meet NOP standards, which 
includes maintaining data that preserve the identity of all 
organically managed animals and edible and nonedible animal products 
produced on the operation. 

One producer we visited told us that his farm began the transition 
from a conventional farm in 1995 and became a grass-fed beef and 
certified organic farm in 2006 (see figure 4). This producer also said 
that the transition experience was economically challenging. 
Specifically, during this conversion the farm stopped bringing in 
outside animals and changed confinement and feed practices. Through 
such changes, this producer said that, overall, the animals are 
healthier and the farm has increased marketing opportunities, which he 
feels outweighs the costs. 

Figure 4: Grass-Fed Cattle Raised without Antibiotics: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photograph] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

In addition to organic, there are other alternative modes of 
production. For example, FSIS has a "raised without antibiotics" 
production label for red meat and poultry. Before FSIS will approve 
such a label, producers must provide the agency with sufficient 
documentation that demonstrates animals were raised without 
antibiotics. Other commonly approved FSIS poultry and meat production 
labels include "natural" and "free range," though these labels do not 
limit the use of antibiotics (see figure 5). 

Figure 5: Free-Range Chickens at a Portable Chicken House: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photograph] 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

Some conventional and alternative producers we visited told us that 
animals produced without antibiotics typically grow at slower rates 
and tend to weigh less at market, requiring producers to charge higher 
premiums to cover these additional production costs. Producers raising 
animals without antibiotics typically have to take greater 
preventative measures, such as changes in husbandry practices, in 
order to reduce chances of illness. These changes in husbandry 
practices may include providing hay bedding for newly birthed calves 
and mother cows, selecting and breeding animals with disease 
resistance, and allowing greater access outdoors and space per animal. 
When animals do become sick, alternative disease treatments depend on 
the animal and illness. For example, cows may be treated with sea salt 
and a patch for pink eye and splints for broken legs. Still, 
antibiotics may need to be used as a last resort and, in such cases, 
these animals are sold to the conventional market, creating an 
economic loss for the producer. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: The Food and Drug Administration's Antibiotic Sales Data: 

Tables 7 and 8 provide examples of the data collected by the Food and 
Drug Administration as required by the Animal Drug User Fee Amendments 
of 2008 (ADUFA). 

Table 7: 2009 Sales and Distribution Data, by Drug Class, for 
Antimicrobial Drugs Approved for Use in Food-Producing Animals in the 
United States: 

Antimicrobial class: Aminoglycosides; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 339,678. 

Antimicrobial class: Cephalosporins; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 41,328. 

Antimicrobial class: Ionophores; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 3,740,627. 

Antimicrobial class: Lincosamides; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 115,837. 

Antimicrobial class: Macrolides; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 861,985. 

Antimicrobial class: Penicillins; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 610,514. 

Antimicrobial class: Sulfas; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 517,873. 

Antimicrobial class: Tetracyclines; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 4,611,892. 

Antimicrobial class: Fluoroquinolones and Diaminopyrimidines combined; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 11,101. 

Antimicrobial class: Aminocoumarins, Glycolipids, Quinoxalines 
combined; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 802,388. 

Antimicrobial class: Amphenicols, Pleuromutilins, Polypeptides, and 
Streptogramins combined; 
Annual totals (kilograms of active ingredient): 1,413,877. 

Source: GAO analysis of FDA data. 

[End of table] 

Table 8: 2009 Sales and Distribution Data, by Route of Administration, 
for Antimicrobial Drugs Approved for Use in Food-Producing Animals in 
the United States: 

Method of administration: In feed; 
Amount of antimicrobial (kilograms): 9,701,180. 

Method of administration: In water; 
Amount of antimicrobial (kilograms): 2,065,433. 

Method of administration: By injection; 
Amount of antimicrobial (kilograms): 422,818. 

Source: FDA. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Structure of DANMAP: 

The objectives of the Danish Integrated Antimicrobial Resistance 
Monitoring and Research Program (DANMAP) are to monitor the 
consumption of antibiotics for food animals and humans; monitor the 
occurrence of antibiotic resistance in bacteria from food animals, 
food of animal origin, and humans; study associations between 
antibiotic use and resistance; and identify routes of transmission and 
areas for further research studies. Table 9 shows the types of data 
gathered about antibiotic use and resistance in Denmark and the 
sources of these data. 

Table 9: Components of DANMAP: 

Antibiotic use data: 

Program component: Animal antibiotic use (VetStat); 
Source of data: Prescription records from veterinary pharmacies, feed 
mills, veterinarians, and private companies; 
Type of information recorded: 
* Farm identification number; 
* Prescribing veterinarian identification number; 
* Intended species and age group; 
* Disease being treated; 
* Medicine being prescribed; 
* Dose of medicine; 
* Date and place prescription was filled (pharmacy, feed mill, 
veterinarian). 

Antibiotic use data: Program component: Human antibiotic use (Danish 
Medicines Agency); 
Source of data: Human pharmacies (including hospital pharmacies); 
Type of information recorded: 
* Identification number of patient; 
* Identification number of prescribing physician; 
* Date and place prescription was filled (i.e., pharmacy, hospital 
pharmacy); 
* Payment/reimbursement method; 
* Medicine being prescribed; 
* Dose of medicine. 

Antibiotic resistance data: 

Entity under surveillance: 
Source of bacteria samples: 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 

Entity under surveillance: Animals; 
Source of bacteria samples: Healthy production animals at slaughter 
plants; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Escherischia coli; 
* Enterococcus faecium; 
* Enterococcus faecalis; 
* Campylobacter coli; 
* Campylobacter jejuni. 

Entity under surveillance: Animals; 
Source of bacteria samples: Diagnostic laboratory submissions; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Antibiotic use data: E. coli O149 and E. coli F5 (K99). 

Entity under surveillance: Animals; 
Source of bacteria samples: Danish Salmonella surveillance program in 
swine and broiler chickens; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Salmonella. 

Entity under surveillance: Animals; 
Source of bacteria samples: Clinical and subclinical infections; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Salmonella Typhimurium. 

Entity under surveillance: Food; 
Source of bacteria samples: Wholesale and retail food samples from 
both Danish and imported foods; Danish Salmonella surveillance program 
in pork and beef; risk-based Salmonella surveillance program for 
Danish poultry and imported meat; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Campylobacter; 
* indicator E. coli; 
* Enterococci;
* Salmonella. 

Entity under surveillance: Humans[A]; 
Source of bacteria samples: A proportion of patients diagnosed with 
Salmonella or Campylobacter infections; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Salmonella enterica serovars Typhimurium and Enteritidis; 
* Campylobacter jejuni. 

Entity under surveillance: Humans[A]; 
Source of bacteria samples: Blood samples of Staphylococcus aureus are 
sent to the Statens Serum Institute on a voluntary basis; 
it is mandatory to submit samples of all methicillin-resistant 
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA); 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Staphylococcus aureus. 

Entity under surveillance: Humans[A]; 
Source of bacteria samples: All blood and spinal fluid samples are 
sent to the Statens Serum Institute; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes (group A 
streptococci), group B, C, and G streptococci. 

Entity under surveillance: Humans[A]; 
Source of bacteria samples: All samples from blood, urine, or other 
samples were submitted to the Statens Serum Institute; 
Bacteria tested for resistance: 
* Escherichia coli; 
* Klebsiella pneumoniae; 
* Pseudomonas aeruginosa; 
* noninvasive Streptococcus pneumoniae; 
* noninvasive Streptococcus pyogenes; 
* invasive E. faecium; 
* invasive E. faecalis. 

Source: DANMAP. 

[A] Some DANMAP reports include analysis of bacterial samples taken 
from healthy humans. However, DANMAP 2009 did not. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: ARS and NIFA Research Activities Related to Alternatives 
to Current Antibiotic Use Practices: 

Agency: ARS; 
Grantee(s): University of Arkansas; 
Project title: Development of Nonantibiotic Alternatives for Foodborne 
Pathogen Control in Turkeys; 
Project year(s): 2001-2006; 
Description: Studied effectiveness of nonantibiotic drug therapies 
(specifically bacteriophages) in eliminating certain bacteria in 
poultry; 
Total funding: Not provided by the agency[A]. 

Agency: ARS; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: Characterization and Enhancement of Immune Responses of 
Calves; 
Project year(s): 2002-2006; 2006-2011; 
Description: Studied the immune systems of calves and sought to 
construct an oral vaccine and devise nutrition-based approaches that 
promote disease resistance; 
Total funding: $443,500 (FY 2010)[A, B]. 

Agency: ARS; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: Development of Alternative Approaches to Antibiotics 
for Controlling Bacterial Respiratory Pathogens in Poultry; 
Project year(s): 2002-2006; 2007-2012; 
Description: Studying the effectiveness of nonantibiotic drug 
therapies (specifically bacteriophages) at preventing and treating 
specific diseases in poultry; 
Total funding: Not provided by the agency[A]. 

Agency: ARS; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: Interventions to Reduce Epizootic Pathogenic Bacteria 
in Swine and Cattle; 
Project year(s): 2005-2010; 
Description: Researched management strategies that may help reduce 
foodborne bacteria in swine and cattle; 
Total funding: Not provided by the agency [A]. 

Agency: ARS; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: Impact of Diet and Gut Microbial Ecology on Foodborne 
Bacterial Pathogens and Antimicrobial Resistance in Farm Animals; 
Project year(s): 2005-2010; 
Description: Studied genes resistant to certain bacteria in food 
animals and dietary strategies to limit certain diseases in food 
animals; 
Total funding: $373,800; (FY 2010)[A,B]. 

Agency: ARS; 
Grantee(s): Not applicable; 
Project title: Interventions and Methodologies to Reduce Human and 
Foodborne Bacterial Pathogens in Chickens; 
Project year(s): 2005-2010; 
Description: Researched the effectiveness of methodologies such as 
nonantibiotic drug therapies (specifically peptides and 
bacteriophages) and certain management practices in reducing or 
eliminating specific bacteria in poultry farms; 
Total funding: Not provided by the agency[A]. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Michigan State University; 
Project title: Neutrophil Apoptosis Delay at Parturition-Mechanisms 
and Inflammatory Consequences During Interaction with Mastitis-Causing 
Coliforms; 
Project year(s): 2006-2010; 
Description: Researched nonantibiotic drug therapies (specifically 
novel blood factors and neutrophil behaviors) to prevent or treat 
mastitis in calves; 
Total funding: $348,000. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): University of California; Washington State University; 
Project title: Dissemination of Cephalosporin Resistance Genes; 
Project year(s): 2005-2008; 2007-2008; 
Description: Studied the relationship between therapeutic antibiotic 
use and antibiotic resistance in animals; 
Total funding: $980,000; $425,434. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): University of California; Washington State University; 
Project title: Reducing the Use of Antibiotics and the Incidence of 
Antibiotic Resistance on Calf Ranches; 
Project year(s): 2004-2007; 2007-2009; 
Description: Evaluated the effectiveness of three management 
strategies that may reduce the use of antibiotics and the incidence of 
antibiotic resistance in calf rearing facilities; 
Total funding: $600,000; $245,204. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Iowa State University; 
Project title: Functional Genomics and Cellular Immunity to Salmonella; 
Project year(s): 2007-2011; 
Description: Researched nonantibiotic therapeutic strategies to reduce 
bacterial burden in poultry, in order to improve production and food 
safety; 
Total funding: $472,356. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Oklahoma State University; 
Project title: Enhancing Disease Resistance by Boosting Innate 
Immunity; 
Project year(s): 2008-2011; 
Description: Researched the effectiveness of nonantibiotic drug 
therapies (specifically peptides) in disease control and prevention 
for food animals, while minimizing the use of antibiotics and 
emergence of drug-resistant pathogens; 
Total funding: $365,500. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Ohio State University; 
Project title: The Relationship Between Poultry Litter and the 
Intestinal Microbial Community Profile in Broilers; 
Project year(s): 2008-2012; 
Description: Studying the presence of bacteria populations over time 
under varying management strategies; 
Total funding: $308,086. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): ARS; 
Project title: Engineering Bacteriophage Endolysins: Antimicrobials 
for Mastitis Pathogens That are Refractory to Resistance Development; 
Project year(s): 2007-2011; 
Description: Explored the development of a new antibiotic that may be 
used to treat mastitis without causing resistance development; 
Total funding: $348,703. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Ohio State University; 
Project title: Combating the Transmission of Antibiotic Resistance 
through the Global Food Chain; 
Project year(s): 2008-2011; 
Description: Researched methods to minimize antibiotic resistance 
transmission through the global food chain, improve safety of global 
food supplies, and enhance U.S. leadership in the global market; 
Total funding: $99,979. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): North Carolina State University; 
Project title: Molecular Epidemiology of Salmonella in Conventional 
and Antimicrobial Free Swine Production Systems; 
Project year(s): 2008-2011; 
Description: Studied the makeup and presence of Salmonella over time 
in conventional verses antibiotic-free production systems; 
Total funding: $389,383. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Texas A&M University; 
Project title: Novel Pre-Harvest Interventions to Protect 
Antimicrobials of Critical Importance in Human and Veterinary Medicine; 
Project year(s): 2008-2012; 
Description: Evaluating potential interventions that may manage 
antibiotic-resistant bacteria in animal agriculture; 
Total funding: Agency: $939,999. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): University of Connecticut; 
Project title: Investigating the Potential of Natural Antimicrobials 
for Controlling Bovine Mastitis; 
Project year(s): 2009-2011; 
Description: Studied the development of new antibiotics to control 
mastitis which could help decrease use of antibiotics in bovine 
operations and decrease antibiotic-resistant bacteria in milk; 
Total funding: $150,000. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Ohio State University; 
Project title: Effectiveness of Reduced Agricultural Antimicrobial 
Usage as a Food Safety Intervention; 
Project year(s): 2010-2013; 
Description: Studying the effects of antibiotic use on bacteria 
emergence and on antibiotic resistance; 
Total funding: $399,924. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Kansas State University; 
Project title: Practical Interventions to Effectively Manage 
Antibiotic Resistance in Beef and Dairy Cattle Systems: A Fully 
Integrated Approach; 
Project year(s): 2010-2014; 
Description: Identifying, evaluating, and implementing interventions 
for managing antibiotic resistance in beef and dairy cattle systems; 
Total funding: $2,000,000. 

Agency: NIFA[C]; 
Grantee(s): Washington State University; 
Project title: Minimizing Antibiotic Resistance Transmission: The 
Dairy Farm as a Model System; 
Project year(s): 2010-2014; 
Description: Researching methods and strategies to reduce antibiotic 
resistance transmission along the food chain; 
Total funding: $2,000,000. 

Source: GAO analysis of agency documents. 

[A] The focus of this project was not specifically on the development 
of alternatives to antibiotic use but has provided a framework for 
future research efforts focused on the impact of alternatives. 

[B] This figure is based on fiscal year 2010 funding levels, and is 
similar to funding for each year of the project. 

[C] In 2010, NIFA was allocated up to $4 million to award two 
competitive grants related to antibiotic resistance and use (awarded 
to Kansas State University and Washington State University). NIFA 
expects to make decisions about similar grants for fiscal year 2011 in 
September, and to release award announcements in fiscal year 2012. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: CDC and FDA Research Activities Related to Alternatives 
to Current Antibiotic Use Practices: 

Agencies: CDC, FDA; 
Grantees: University of Georgia, North Carolina State University, 
Colorado State University, Washington State University; 
Project title: Reducing Resistant Bacteria in Food Animals; 
Project years: 2001-2003; 
Description: Two studies in dairy cattle and two in swine to assess 
the impact of antibiotic use, develop alternatives to the use of 
antibiotics as growth promotants, and to evaluate new practices that 
reduce resistant bacteria in food animals; 
Total funding: Not provided by the agency. 

Grantees: Not provided by the agency; 
Project title: Get Smart on the Farm: Reducing Resistant Bacteria in 
Food Animals; 
Project years: 2004-2005; 
Description: Studies to understand and look at ways to reduce 
resistance in food animals, and to investigate alternative therapies 
to antibiotics; 
Total funding: Not provided by the agency[A]. 

Source: GAO analysis of agency documents. 

[A] Funding for this research activity came from the total $1,716,600 
used to fund all of the Get Smart on the Farm related activities from 
2003-2010. Officials were unable to provide detailed funding amount 
for this specific research activity. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix VII: Comments from the Department of Agriculture: 

USDA: 
United States Department of Agriculture: 
Office of tie Secretary: 
Washington, D.C. 20250: 

August 25, 2011: 

Ms. Lisa Shames, Director: 
Natural Resources and Environment: 
United States Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Shames: 

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has reviewed the 
U.S. Government Accountability Office's (GAO) Draft Report, 
"Antibiotic Resistance: Agencies Have Made Limited Progress Addressing 
Antibiotic Use in Animals" (11-801). While USDA agrees with each 
Recommendation, we offer the following perspectives on each
Recommendation. 

Overall, USDA believes that actions taken to address antimicrobial 
resistance should be based on science. Currently, there is 
insufficient scientific information available to make important policy 
decisions regarding use of antibiotics for growth promotion purposes.
Such policy decisions may, in some cases as described in the GAO 
report, actually lead to increased use of antibiotics with unknown 
potential effects on overall antibiotic resistance and public health, 
GAO's assessment that the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring 
System (NARMS) data cannot be used to assess antibiotic resistance 
trends on livestock and poultry operations is not entirely accurate. 
While these data do not provide a national estimate of antibiotic 
resistance in animal agriculture and are collected on a rotational 
basis, the methods used for collection of these data are consistent 
across studies and can be used to examine general trends. 

GAO Recommendation: 

To track the effectiveness of policies to curb antibiotic resistance, 
including FDA's voluntary strategy designed to reduce antibiotic use 
in food animals and to address action items in the surveillance focus 
area of the 2001 interagency plan, GAO recommends the Secretaries of 
Agriculture and Health and Human Services direct agencies to, 
consistent with their existing authorities, 1) identify potential 
approaches for collecting detailed data on antibiotic use in food 
animals, including the species in which antibiotics are used and the 
purpose for their use, as well as the costs, time frames, and 
potential tradeoffs associated with each approach; 2) collaborate with 
industry to select the best approach; 3) seek any resources necessary 
to implement the approach; and 4) use the data to assess the 
effectiveness of policies to curb antibiotic resistance. 

USDA Response: 

USDA agrees with this Recommendation. USDA has proactively devised 
strategies to identify approaches to more effectively collect detailed 
information on antibiotic use in food animals, as documented in the 
report titled "A USDA Plan to Address Antimicrobial Resistance," dated 
September 3, 2010. This report described a portfolio of current and 
planned activities with anticipated funding at current levels and 
additional recommended activities that would require additional 
funding. This portfolio of activities represented a broad USDA-wide 
approach incorporating actions in many different agencies, Under ideal 
circumstances, USDA would engage the industry in identifying the 
optimal mix of activities to garner the data needed to meet part 4 of 
this Recommendation. Our Agricultural Research Service (ARS), in 
conjunction with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), is piloting 
two different approaches on collecting antibiotic use data in food 
animals and potential tradeoffs for each approach. This is being done 
in collaboration with experts from industry, government, and academia. 
USDA is committed to working collaboratively with stakeholders 
including industry and other government entities to use the data to 
craft science-based policy to mitigate risks where appropriate. 

GAO Recommendation: 

To enhance surveillance of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in food 
animals, GAO recommends the Secretaries of Agriculture and Health and 
Human Services direct agencies to, consistent with their existing 
authorities, modify NARMS sampling to make the data more 
representative of antibiotic resistance in food animals and retail 
meat throughout the United States. 

USDA Response: 

USDA agrees with this Recommendation. The NARMS sampling is not 
currently conducted on a randomly-selected, nationally-representative 
population of food animals and retail meat in the U.S. In consultation 
with its Federal partners, our Food Safety and Inspection Service 
(FSIS) is evaluating options for changing its Salmonella verification 
program to provide sampling data to NARMS that will allow for more 
representative characterization of antibiotic resistance in food 
animals and retail meat and poultry. Budget constraints and FSIS food 
safety verification program needs significantly influence this 
evaluation. The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) 
continues to evaluate options to determine the prevalence of 
resistance and frequency and manner of use of antibiotics in the pre-
harvest animal production environments. ARS is working with FDA to 
develop several approaches to enhance the accuracy and monitoring of 
the animal sampling collected for NARMS. These strategies will he 
evaluated to determine the best approach for future revisions to 
NARMS. Changes to the NARMS program will be done in cooperation with 
NARMS' collaborating agencies, which include USDA's APIIIS and FSIS, 
and HHS' FDA, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 

GAO Recommendation: 

To better focus future federal research efforts on alternatives to 
current antibiotic use practices, we recommend that the Secretaries of 
Agriculture and Health and Human Services direct agencies to 1) assess 
previous research efforts on alternatives and identify gaps where 
additional research is needed, in collaboration with the animal 
production industry; and 2) specify steps in the draft 2010 
interagency plan that agencies will take to fill those gaps. 

USDA Response: 

USDA agrees with this Recommendation. The 2011 interagency plan can be 
improved to better outline potential actions for research alternatives 
to antibiotics, Assessment in this area has not been done because the 
outcome measurements have not been defined. Actual alternative 
products must be approved by FDA. Other alternatives such as vaccines 
or management practices are evaluated by disease prevention rattier 
than as a specific product and as stated earlier are impossible to 
measure in the context of reduced antibiotic use. Some milestones that 
ARS has used previously are number of peer-reviewed publications, 
technology transfers, and patents. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Edward Avalos: 
Under Secretary: 
Marketing and Regulatory Programs: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VIII: Comments from the Department of Health and Human 
Services: 

Department Of Health & Human Services: 
Office Of The Secretary: 
Assistant Secretary for Legislation: 
Washington, DC 20201: 

August 15, 2011: 

Lisa Shames: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Ms. Shames: 

Attached are comments on the U.S. Government Accountability Office's 
(GAO) draft report entitled: "Antibiotic Resistance: Agencies Have 
Made Limited Progress Addressing Antibiotic Use In Animals" (GAO-11-
801). 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to review this report 
before its publication. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Jim R. Esquea: 
Assistant Secretary for Legislation: 

Attachment: 

[End of letter] 

General Comments Of The Department Of Health And Human Services (HHS) 
On The Government Accountability Office's (GAO) Draft Report Entitled, 
"Antibiotic Resistance: Agencies Have Made Limited Progress Addressing 
Antibiotic Use In Animals" (GA0-11-801): 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to review and comment on 
this draft report. While the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 
generally agrees with GAO's recommendations, FDA has made substantial 
progress and has taken an active and deliberative role in addressing 
the complex and controversial issue of antibiotic use in food-
producing animals. FDA's work in this area is ongoing, and includes a 
number of important accomplishments, including several initiatives 
that are relevant to GAO's recommendations. Some of the important 
steps that have been taken to date include the following: 

* In 1996, the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System 
(NARMS) was established. NARMS provides ongoing monitoring data on 
antimicrobial resistance patterns in select zoonotic foodborne 
bacteria. NARMS surveillance and research activities arc designed to 
supply the data needed to inform and prioritize science-based 
approaches to assuring food safety, and to reduce uncertainty about 
the potential public health risks posed by antimicrobial use in food 
animals. FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) is the lead 
coordinator of NARMS and collaborates with the Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention (CDC), the U.S. Department of Agriculture's 
Agricultural Research Service (ARS), and state public health 
laboratories to collect data to monitor antimicrobial resistant 
foodborne pathogens in animal carcasses at slaughter, in retail meats, 
and in human clinical cases. 

* In 1999. FDA published a "Framework Document" and convened public 
meetings to gather public input on developing an approach for 
evaluating antimicrobial resistance safety concerns as part of the new 
animal drug approval process. 

* In 2001, a Public Health Action Plan (PHAP) to Combat Antimicrobial 
Resistance was released. The PHAP identified actions needed to address 
the emerging threat of antibiotic resistance and highlighted the need 
to improve federal agencies' ongoing monitoring of antibiotic use and 
of antibiotic-resistant infections. Reports on the action plan have 
subsequently been published annually. 

* In 2003, as a result of the "Framework Document" process, FDA 
published a final guidance document for industry (GFI #152), 
"Evaluating the Safety of Antimicrobial New Animal Drugs with Regard 
to their Microbiological Effects on Bacteria of Human Health Concern." 
The guidance outlines a qualitative risk assessment process for 
evaluating the safety of antimicrobial drugs intended for use in food-
producing animals. The importance of a drug for human medical therapy 
is a key factor considered in the evaluation. 

* In 2004, FDA published a draft risk assessment on the use of 
streptogramins (Virginiamycin) in animals and the development of 
Synercid-resistant  Enterocomis faccium infections in humans. Comments 
on the draft risk assessment to assess the link between the use of 
Virginiarnycin in animals and  Synercid resistance in humans were 
received from representatives of the general public, public health 
professionals, and industry groups. 

* In 2004, FDA also conducted a Veterinary Medicine Advisory Committee 
(VMAC) meeting on the microbial food safety of tulathromycin indicated 
to treat respiratory disease in cattle and swine. Tulathromycin is 
related to the rnacrolide class of drugs which are critically 
important for treating bacterial infections in humans. 

* In 2005, FDA withdrew approval for the use of enrofloxacin in 
poultry. This animal drug belongs to a class of drugs known as 
fluoroquinolones which are critically important for treating bacterial 
infections in humans. 

* In 2006, FDA conducted another VMAC meeting on the microbial food 
safety of injectable cefquinome sulfate for bovine respiratory disease 
in cattle. Cefquinome is a 4th generation cephalosporin, which is a 
class of critically important drugs for treating bacterial infections 
in humans. 

* In 2010, FDA published draft guidance for industry (GFI # 209), "The 
Judicious Use of Medically Important Antimicrobial Drugs in Food-
Producing Animals." In that document, FDA provided two guiding 
principles for the judicious use of antimicrobials in animal 
agriculture. First, medically important antimicrobial drugs should be 
limited to uses in food-producing animals that are considered 
necessary for assuring animal health, which means that they should not 
be used in healthy animals for production purposes (e.g., to promote 
growth or improve feed efficiency). Second, the guidance also 
recommended that medically important antimicrobial drugs he limited to 
uses in food-producing animals that include veterinary oversight or 
consultation. 

* In 2010, FDA also published the first annual summary report of 
antimicrobial drug sales and distribution data in compliance with 
Section 105 of the Animal Drug User Fee Amendments of 2008 (ADUFA). 
This new provision requires antimicrobial drug sponsors to report to 
FDA on an annual basis the amount of antimicrobial active ingredient 
in their drugs that have been sold or distributed for use in food-
producing animals. It also requires FDA each year to make summaries of 
the sales and distribution information received from drug sponsors 
available to the public. 

* In March 2011, a draft revised 2010 PHAP was published for public 
comment. The draft revised PHAI' provides a valuable framework for FDA 
to work with our federal partners on the issue of antimicrobial 
resistance. 

Currently, a number of relevant initiatives arc ongoing within FDA 
including 1) the development of a coordinated strategy for 
implementing the recommendations outlined in GFI #209,2) an effort to 
examine possible mechanisms for enhancing the collection of data that 
can help track antimicrobial drug use, and 3) the development and 
implementation of a strategy for enhancing the NARMS program. 

One measure of the progress for implementing FDA's strategy for 
encouraging judicious use of medically important antimicrobial drugs 
in food-producing animals consistent with GFI #209 is the pace at 
which medically important antibiotic products are successfully updated 
to align with the GFI #209 recommendations. Implementation of this 
strategy is a high priority for FDA. Also, as noted below, FDA is 
exploring approaches for obtaining additional information related to 
antimicrobial drug use to enhance the antimicrobial drug 
sales/distribution data that is currently reported to FDA in 
compliance with Section 105 of the Animal Drug User Fee Amendments of 
2008 (ADUFA). Such additional information will assist in tracking the 
progress of steps taken to support the judicious use of these 
important drugs. 

Addressing antimicrobial resistance is a challenging task that 
requires the expertise and collaborative efforts of many entities. FDA 
continues to utilize a multi-pronged approach for addressing concerns 
about the use of antimicrobial drugs in animal agriculture. The agency 
is working diligently to phase in key changes with the cooperation of 
the animal health industry and is exploring other regulatory tools to 
help support the goal of assuring the judicious use of medically 
important antimicrobial drugs in food-producing animals. FDA is 
collaborating with other relevant government agencies and is seeking 
input from its stakeholders to develop a sound strategy for addressing 
this important public health issue. 

FDA offers the following additional comments regarding GAO's 
recommendations: 

GAO Recommendation No. 1: 

To track the effectiveness of policies to curb antibiotic resistance, 
including FDA 's voluntary strategy designed to reduce antibiotic use 
in food animals and to address action items in the surveillance focus 
area of the 2001 interagency plan, we recommend the Secretaries of 
Agriculture and Health and Human Services direct agencies to, 
consistent with their existing authorities, (1) identify potential 
approaches for collecting detailed data on antibiotic use in food 
animals, including the species in which antibiotics are used and the 
purpose for their use, as well as the costs, time frames and potential 
tradeoffs associated with each approach; (2) collaborate with industry 
to select the best approach; (3) seek any resources necessary to 
implement the approach; and (4) use the data to assess the 
effectiveness of policies to curb antibiotic resistance. 

FDA Response: 

FDA generally agrees with this recommendation and recognizes that 
having more detailed data to help track trends in antibiotic use in 
food-producing animals would benefit the overall effort to assure the 
judicious use of these drugs. This information can be helpful when 
analyzing trends in antimicrobial resistance observed through the 
NARMS program and can provide an indication of changes in antibiotic 
use practices in response to the implementation of judicious use 
strategies. 

Given the limitations of the antimicrobial drug sales and distribution 
data currently reported to FDA annually in compliance with Section 105 
of the Animal Drug User Fee Amendments of 2008 (ADUFA), the agency is 
exploring potential approaches for obtaining more detailed sales and 
distribution information or other information on actual drug use. FDA 
intends to consult with USDA and seek opportunities where the agencies 
could collaborate on strategies for addressing this issue. 

GAO Recommendation No. 2: 

To enhance surveillance of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in food 
animals, we recommend that the Secretaries of Agriculture and Health 
and Human Services direct agencies to, consistent with their existing 
authorities, modify ATARMS sampling to make the data more 
representative of antibiotic resistance in food animals and retail 
meat throughout the United States. 

FDA Response: 

In 2007, the FDA Science Board completed a detailed review of the 
NARMS program and provided a number of recommendations. With these 
recommendations in mind, FDA developed a draft strategic plan for 
pursuing a number of key enhancements to the NARMS program, many of 
which have been implemented or are being developed. 

Based on the 2007 FDA Science Board review, FDA published the WARMS 
Strategic Plan for public comment on January 24, 2011. The key 
strategic goals outlined in this plan include, I) to develop, 
implement and optimize a shared database, with advanced data 
acquisition and reporting tools; 2) to make sampling more 
representative and more applicable to trend analysis; 3) to strengthen 
collaborative research projects to address high risk food safety 
issues; and 4) to support international activities which promote food 
safety, and mitigate the spread of antimicrobial resistance. 

In July 2011, FDA held a public meeting to discuss this strategic plan 
with particular focus on ways to improve the current sampling 
approach. Based on this input, FDA intends to work collaboratively 
with CDC and USDA on moving forward with enhancements to the NARMS 
program. 

We note that on page 19 of the draft report, GAO states that, Due to 
its nonrandom selection of states, FDA cannot determine the extent to 
which NARMS retail meat samples are representative of the United 
States. It is true that the participating states are not selected 
randomly, but instead volunteer to participate in the program. 
Therefore, some regions of the country are not represented in the 
NARMS retail meat program. We do not believe that samples need to be 
statistically representative of the entire US to serve as indicators 
of U.S. retail meat. 

GAO Recommendation No. 3: 

To better focus future federal research efforts on alternatives to 
current antibiotic use practices, we recommend that the Secretaries of 
Agriculture and Health and Human Services direct agencies to (1) 
assess previous research efforts on alternatives and identify gaps 
where additional research is needed, in collaboration with the animal 
production industry; and (2) specify .steps in the draft 2010 
interagency plan that agencies will take to Jill those gaps. 

FDA Response: 

FDA agrees that an important component of an overall strategy for 
curbing the development of antimicrobial resistance is to encourage 
the use, where possible, of alternatives to antibiotics for treating, 
controlling, or preventing disease in animals. Although some of these 
alternatives, such as the use of vaccines in animals or alternative 
management practices, are beyond the scope of FDA's authority, FDA is 
committed to working collaboratively with other agencies such as 
USDA/ARS on this important issue. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IX: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Lisa Shames, (202) 512-3841, or shamesl@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Mary Denigan-Macauley, 
Assistant Director; Kevin Bray; Antoine Clark; Julia Coulter; Cindy 
Gilbert; Janice Poling; Katherine Raheb; Leigh Ann Sennette; Ben 
Shouse; and Ashley Vaughan made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Antibiotic Resistance: Data Gaps Will Remain Despite HHS Taking Steps 
to Improve Monitoring. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-406]. Washington, D.C.: June 1, 
2011. 

Federal Food Safety Oversight: Food Safety Working Group Is a Positive 
First Step but Governmentwide Planning Is Needed to Address 
Fragmentation. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-289]. 
Washington, D.C.: March 18, 2011. 

High Risk Series: An Update. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278]. Washington, D.C.: February 
2011. 

Veterinarian Workforce: Actions are Needed to Ensure Sufficient 
Capacity for Protecting Public and Animal Health. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-178]. Washington, D.C.: February 4, 
2009. 

Food Safety: Selected Countries' Systems Can Offer Insights into 
Ensuring Import Safety and Responding to Foodborne Illness. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-794]. Washington, D.C.: 
June 10, 2008. 

Avian Influenza: USDA Has Taken Steps to Prepare for Outbreaks, but 
Better Planning Could Improve Response. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-652]. Washington, D.C.: June 11, 
2007. 

Antibiotic Resistance: Federal Agencies Need to Better Focus Efforts 
to Address Risk to Humans from Antibiotic Use in Animals. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-490]. Washington, D.C.: April 22, 
2004. 

Food Safety: The Agricultural Use of Antibiotics and Its Implications 
for Human Health. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-99-74]. Washington, D.C.: April 
28, 1999. 

Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government Performance 
and Results Act. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-118]. Washington, D.C.: June 
1996. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Food Safety: The Agricultural Use of Antibiotics and Its 
Implications for Human Health, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/RCED-99-74] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 
28, 1999). 

[2] GAO, Antibiotic Resistance: Federal Agencies Need to Better Focus 
Efforts to Address Risk to Humans from Antibiotic Use in Animals, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-490] (Washington, D.C.: 
Apr. 22, 2004). 

[3] See, most recently, GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278] (Washington, D.C.: February 
2011). 

[4] See: GAO, Federal Food Safety Oversight: Food Safety Working Group 
Is a Positive First Step but Governmentwide Planning Is Needed to 
Address Fragmentation, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-289] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 18, 
2011). 

[5] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-490]. 

[6] FDA Science Advisory Board, National Antimicrobial Resistance 
Monitoring System (NARMS) Program Review (May 25, 2007). 

[7] For more information, see GAO, Antibiotic Resistance: Data Gaps 
Will Remain Despite HHS Taking Steps to Improve Monitoring, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-406] (Washington, D.C.: 
June 1, 2011). 

[8] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-490]. 

[9] GAO, Veterinarian Workforce: Actions are Needed to Ensure 
Sufficient Capacity for Protecting Public and Animal Health, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-178] (Washington, D.C.: 
Feb. 4, 2009). 

[10] GAO, Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government 
Performance and Results Act, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-118] (Washington, D.C.: June 
1996). 

[11] A land-grant university is an institution that has been 
designated by its state legislature or Congress to receive unique 
federal support, including funds for cooperative extension offices. 
Land-grant universities are directed by law to offer public education 
programs based on the results of university research, including 
research and education related to agriculture issues. 

[12] For more information on USDA's efforts to prepare for outbreaks 
of highly pathogenic avian influenza, see GAO, Avian Influenza: USDA 
Has Taken Steps to Prepare for Outbreaks, but Better Planning Could 
Improve Response, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-652] 
(Washington, D.C.: June 11, 2007). 

[13] Avoparcin was never approved for food animal use in the United 
States. 

[14] GAO, Food Safety: Selected Countries' Systems Can Offer Insights 
into Ensuring Import Safety and Responding to Foodborne Illness, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-794] (Washington, D.C.: 
June 10, 2008). 

[15] Denmark, Sweden, France, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom 
collected antibiotic use data by species. Germany, Norway, Finland, 
Switzerland, and the Czech Republic collected more general data on 
antibiotic use. Norway and Switzerland are not EU countries, but they 
are nevertheless sharing data about antibiotic use. 

[16] Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, 
Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, and Spain. 

[17] USDA officials noted that there is no guarantee that animals 
raised using alternative modes of production contain no antibiotic- 
resistant bacteria. 

[End of section] 

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