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Some Common Questions about Medicines
for Farm Animals
Why do animals need veterinary medicines?
For animal welfare
We all have days when we feel fantastic, others when we are
a bit under the weather and times when, through
no fault of our own, we are really quite poorly.
When we are ill most of us automatically turn to modern medicine
to make us better. We can do this without a second thought
because we know that the manufacturers have spent years developing
their products to ensure their effectiveness and safety.
Ironically, the same people who would not hesitate to take
medicine to ease their own pain or discomfort, sometimes believe
that giving medicines to farm animals for the same reason
is in some way wrong.
Like us, farm animals can also suffer from bacterial and
viral diseases. In addition, like us, they can catch a cold,
fall victim to a flu virus or suffer from what we might generally
refer to as a stomach bug. Whether housed indoors,
even under the very best conditions, or kept outside, farm
animals can suffer respiratory problems, or be affected by
worms and external parasites such as lice and mites.
Unlike us, farm livestock cant communicate what is
wrong with them. They rely on us to look after them and ensure
they receive the medicines needed to treat the conditions
that might cause distress or pain.
Many of us grow up with an image of healthy sheep and cattle
grazing in the fields, chickens scratching in the yard or
pigs rooting in the soil. One of the misconceptions is that
livestock kept using extensive outdoor or organic systems
are free from disease and infection. That is far from the
case. Apart from the considerable risks sometimes posed by
natural predators, animals kept under these conditions still
have to contend with infections and parasitic diseases.
Farmers earn their living from the animals they keep, so
it is in their interest to do everything they can to look
after their livestock. Farmers go to great lengths to select
the right breed of animal for their specific farm conditions
and end markets. They also take care to ensure that the animals
are housed to high standards and fed the right diet to ensure
they grow up healthy and strong.
...prevention of disease
To help maintain farm animals in the condition most people
would like to see, farmers sometimes have to use modern medicines,
which are more advanced, safer and effective than ever before.
Where suitable products exist, the best way to ensure good
health is often to prevent infection taking hold in the first
place. In exactly the same way that we might have our children
vaccinated when they are young, to avoid major difficulties
later in life, medicines, such as vaccines are used to prevent
potential health problems in our farm animals. Veterinary
surgeons work closely with farmers to develop preventative
programmes designed to maintain the health of their animals
or birds.
...treatment of disease
Because preventative treatments are used to ensure their
welfare, most farm animals remain healthy throughout their
lives. However, where effective preventative treatments are
not available, remedial treatments, such as antibiotics, might
be used to help get them back on their feet, to prevent others
members of the herd or flock from being infected, or to prevent
unhealthy animals from entering the human food chain.
For healthy food
The explosion in the worlds population means that during
the next 30 years farmers will have to produce as much food
as they have done in the whole of the last 10,000 years. That
will be a huge task when, even today, many of the worlds
population do not receive an adequate diet. The use of modern
medicines to ensure the animals we farm remain healthy and
productive will play a major role in achieving that aim.
Lets look at the reasons why.
Healthy food comes from healthy animals, so it makes sense
to ensure farm livestock are always in the best possible health.
Healthy animals grow more quickly, make the best use of the
food they eat and produce good quality foodstuffs, such as
meat, dairy products and eggs, at affordable prices. They
also provide us with essential by-products such as wool and
leather.
In contrast, sick or suffering animals not only cost more
to feed but because diseases may affect the eating or keeping
quality of what they produce, the meat, milk or eggs they
produce often cannot be sold. In more extreme cases, it may
even be unsafe to eat food from animals that could be carrying
disease.
Medicines are essential if these hazards are to be effectively
controlled. In fact, one of the requirements for eggs to qualify
for the recognised Lion quality mark for eggs
is that the chickens that produce them are vaccinated against
salmonella.
Professional livestock farmers earn their living from the
animals they keep, so naturally it is in their interest to
do everything they can to look after their livestock. Farmers
are careful to select the right breed of animal for their
specific farm conditions, take care that the animals are housed
to high standards and that they are fed the right diet so
they grow healthy and strong.
In the UK, farmers and veterinarians have an excellent track
record of using animal medicines safely and responsibly to
help achieve these aims. Every time a farm animal is treated,
a record must be kept. Furthermore, the animal or its produce
(eggs or milk) may not enter the food chain until a specified
period (the withdrawal period) following medication
has passed.
The use of modern medicines is essential now and will become
even more important in the future if our farmers are to meet
the worlds food needs.
How do we know that the medicines
used are safe?
Although some people worry about farm animals being given
medicines, the majority of us realise that there is little
cause for concern, and many good reasons why we should use
them.
Animal medicine companies invest huge resources in developing,
testing and manufacturing safe, effective medicines. Without
them, veterinary surgeons and farmers would be unable to carry
out their job properly and look after the welfare of our farm
animals. Just think how you would feel if you went to your
local GP and found the surgery had no modern-day treatments!
It should be reassuring to know that Europe has one of the
worlds most stringent licensing systems for controlling
veterinary medicines. In the UK, the Veterinary Medicines
Directorate (VMD), an executive agency of the Department for
Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA), is responsible
for authorising and controlling the manufacture and marketing
of animal medicines. To protect consumers, it also carries
out checks to make sure there are no harmful residues of animal
medicines present in meat and other animal products.
To ensure that products reaching the market are safe to use
and effective, manufacturers of animal medicines have to operate
within a strict regulatory framework. All animal medicines
are approved under what are known as Precautionary Principles.
These ensure that the medicines we use are safe to livestock,
to the people that administer them, to the environment and
ultimately, for farm animals, to the consumers of any produce
for these animals.
Why do some medicines have to be prescribed
by vets?
We have already talked about how most of us instinctively
reach for the aspirin when we get a headache. Like many other
low-dose general medicines, aspirin is easily available over
the counter and comes with easy-to-follow instructions telling
us how much to take. There are also other medicines which
can't be bought from the supermarket, but which can be brought
from a pharmacy without going to the doctor for a prescription.
Similarly, many routine animal health medicines are available
to farmers from registered merchants operating under a Code
of Practice with trained staff qualified to give advice on
responsible use. These products carry full instructions, approved
by the VMD, on how to use the product.
Many of the more potent drugs and treatments that keep humans
healthy are only available on prescription after a proper
consultation with a trained GP. Similarly, there are times
when only Prescription-Only-Medicines (POM) will do when it
comes to treating animals. Only veterinary surgeons can prescribe
POMs for animals under their care, which is what you would
expect. It is the job of the veterinary surgeon to correctly
diagnose what is wrong, then prescribe and sometimes administer
the most appropriate treatment correctly and safely. This
ensures the well-being and safety of the animal being treated
and, ultimately, the consumer.
For the same reasons that pharmaceutical companies are continually
developing new medicines to treat human ailments, so too it
is important that veterinary surgeons and farmers are able
to choose from a wide range of modern, safe and effective
animal medicines. Some medicines, such as new generation vaccines
or oral rehydration solutions are even leading the way for
human medicine development.
In no small part, the quality, safety and relatively low
cost of the food products we now enjoy is due to the extensive
research invested by the animal health industry in products
to ensure the health of our farm livestock.
Source: NOAH. For more information visit www.noah.co.uk.
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