In the News

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Oct 25, 2011

''Sunshine Letter to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius''

"We are writing to urge you to fully implement Section 1128G of the Social Security Act, the Physician Payments Sunshine Provision, which was added as Section 6002 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA)."

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Oct 10, 2011

''Feds fumble on law aimed at doctors''

"Sunshine Act will make physicians' ties to industry transparent."

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May 1, 2009

''More Readers' Questions About Swine Flu''

This week the World Health Organization raised its global threat level to 5, its second highest, and warned nations to prepare for a global flu pandemic. Additional cases of the new swine flu were confirmed not just in North America and Mexico but also in Switzerland, the Netherlands, Peru, Germany, Austria, Spain, Israel, New Zealand and Hong Kong. And, amid some controversy, the swine flu virus got an official but unwieldy new name: A(H1N1).

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Oct 22, 2007

''Scarce pandemic vaccine to be given in order''

''In the early weeks of a flu pandemic, the first to receive scarce supplies of vaccine will include the military, medical and emergency workers, pregnant women and babies — nearly 23 million people — under a draft federal plan to be outlined Tuesday in Washington.''

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Feb 20, 2006

''Have we learned our lessons about pandemics?''

If a serious flu pandemic occurs, where you live and how well your community has prepared could mean the difference between life and death.No one can say when a pandemic will begin or how severe it will be, but the SARS outbreak in 2003 showed us how quickly a new disease can spread. The 2004 flu vaccine shortage prompted panic and long lines at clinics, and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina brought home the alarming reality of American citizens stranded at a time of need.

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Aug 23, 2012

''‘Superbug’ Stalked NIH Hospital Last Year, Killing Six''

An outbreak of an antibiotic-resistant bacteria known as Klebsiella pneumoniae killed six patients at the clinical center at the National Institutes of Health in 2011. The outbreak was not made public until Wednesday, when NIH researchers published a scientific paper describing the advanced genetic technology they deployed to trace the outbreak.

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Antibiotic Innovation
Apr 4, 2013

''Rep. Louise Slaughter On Antibiotics, Meat And Superbugs''

"80 percent of all the antibiotics we pump out these days goes into animals and animal feed — cows, hogs, chickens, turkeys and more across America, chowing down daily on antibiotics in their feed. To make them grow faster. To allow them to live in crowded conditions. Health officials are clanging the alarm bell, saying that is overuse that is breeding antibiotic-resistant superbugs that we can’t stop, that kill. The meat industry says, “chill out.”

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Mar 14, 2013

Representative Slaughter Leads Effort to Protect Public from Superbugs

Meat and poultry producers routinely feed antibiotics to healthy animals to make them grow faster and to compensate for overcrowded and unsanitary conditions. These practices breed drug-resistant superbugs that make human diseases more difficult and costly to treat and more likely to cause death. Fortunately, on March 14, U.S. Representative Louise Slaughter (D-NY) introduced the Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act of 2013 (PAMTA) to restrict animal agricultural practices that threaten the public’s health.

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Feb 12, 2013

''Pig Manure Reveals More Reason to Worry About Antibiotics''

There's a global campaign to force meat producers to rein in their use of antibiotics on pigs, chickens and cattle. European countries, especially Denmark and the Netherlands, have taken the lead. The U.S. is moving, haltingly, toward similar restrictions. Now the concerns about rampant antibiotic use appear to have reached China, where meat production and antibiotic use have been growing fast.

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Dec 10, 2012

''Drug Overuse in Cattle Imperils Human Health''

"Two kids seriously injured in the Joplin, Mo., tornado in May 2011 showed up at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City suffering from antibiotic-resistant infections from dirt and debris blown into their wounds. Physicians tried different drugs, but at first nothing seemed to work. Blame the overuse of antibiotics in livestock, according to the doctors familiar with their cases."

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Nov 9, 2012

Dispatch from Denmark

Laura Rogers, project director for the Pew Campaign on Human Health and Industrial Farming, is in Denmark this week meeting with farmers, government officials and public health experts to learn how the United States can adapt the country’s successful model.

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Nov 1, 2012

Chicago Public Schools: Serving Meat Raised Without Antibiotics

This November, the Chicago Public School System celebrate the one-year anniversary of the announcment that it would begin serving chicken raised without antibiotics to students in its 473 schools.

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Oct 15, 2012

Been There, 'Dane' That

Denmark is one of the largest pork exporting countries in the world, yet it has just reported that total use of antibiotics for pig production in the country decreased 30 percent from 2010 to 2011. The reduction in antibiotic use is a substantial accomplishment for public health and shows how an industry can dramatically transform its practices with government and public support.

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Oct 11, 2012

State of the Science: Superbugs and Public Health

People tend to think of summer as a time reserved for rest and relaxation, but this has not been the case for many scientists this past season. In the last few months, there have been several new studies on antibiotics widely discussed by media, policymakers, and the public alike.

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Oct 5, 2012

Farmer Friday: Celebrating Farmers Who Raise Animals without Antibiotics

Americans want food that is raised sustainably and that promotes public health while minimizing harm to the environment. It is our agricultural system that affords these choices to the American consumer. Farmer Friday provides a weekly opportunity to shine a spotlight on these producers and thank them for protecting public health by using antibiotics only when their animals are sick.

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Antibiotics in Food Animal Production