Syllabus: GS2/Issues Related To Health
Context
- India is stepping up its regulatory framework to address the use of antibiotics in food animal production, reflecting a broader international push to safeguard human health and ensure food safety.
Use of Antibiotics in Food-Producing Animals
- AMR occurs when pathogens — bacteria, viruses, fungi — develop resistance to drugs that once effectively treated infections.
- It is driven by the overuse and misuse of antimicrobials in both human and veterinary medicine.
- As a result, once-treatable infections are becoming deadly, and the ripple effects are being felt across health systems, food production, and economies.
- According to the First Global Animal Health Report released by the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), AMR could cost:
- $100 trillion in economic losses projected by 2050;
- Food security of 2 billion people at risk due to declining livestock productivity;
- Healthcare costs could surge by $159 billion annually;
- Global GDP losses could reach $1.7 trillion per year;
- Livestock production losses could affect consumption needs of up to 2 billion people
- About 30% reduction in antibiotic use through improved hygiene, vaccination, and biosecurity could boost the global economy by $120 billion by 2050.
- In Aquaculture & Livestock:
- Fluoroquinolones account for 15.8% of antimicrobials used in aquaculture;
- 20% of WOAH member countries still use antimicrobials as growth promoters;
- 7% use critically important antibiotics like colistin and enrofloxacin
Need For Antibiotic Regulations
- EU’s Stringent Antimicrobial Regulations for Imports: The European Union (EU) has implemented robust regulations to curb antimicrobial use in food animals and ensure food safety for its citizens.
- Countries not included in the authorised list, including India, need to demonstrate compliance with these regulations and submit relevant certifications by 3 September 2026 to continue uninterrupted exports to the EU.
- Preserving Drug Efficacy: Without regulation, even last-resort antibiotics like carbapenems and colistin are losing effectiveness.
- Protecting Public Health: AMR threatens to reverse decades of medical progress, making routine surgeries and infections potentially fatal.
- Safeguarding Exports: Stricter norms are essential to meet international food safety standards, especially for animal-derived products.
India’s Regulatory Changes: Strengthening Domestic Regulations
- Amendment in the Export (Quality Control and Inspection) Act, 1963, banning the use of specific antimicrobial drugs in the production of milk, eggs, and honey.
- The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) formally notified the ban covering 15 antibiotics/antibiotic classes, 18 antivirals, and 1 antiprotozoal.
- The Drugs Technical Advisory Board (DTAB), under the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization, reviewed the EU’s list of 37 restricted antimicrobials. It recommended prohibition of 34 out of 37 antimicrobials.
- Aquaculture and Export Norms: India’s coastal aquaculture guidelines prohibit five antibiotic classes and five specific antibiotics.
- It is crucial for maintaining export standards, especially as international buyers increasingly demand antibiotic-free products.
- Honey & Residue Limits: The new rules target honey production, setting stricter residue limits for nitrofurans, sulphonamides, and nine other antibiotics.
- Maximum residue limits (MRPLs) have been doubled from 5 µg/kg to 10 µg/kg.
- FSSAI’s New Rules: The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) introduced the amendment to its Contaminants, Toxins, and Residues regulations.
- It prohibits antibiotic use at any stage of producing milk, meat, poultry, eggs, and aquaculture. Banned substances include:
- Antibiotic Classes: glycopeptides, nitrofurans, nitroimidazoles
- Antibiotics: carbadox, chloramphenicol, colistin, streptomycin, sulfamethoxazole.
- It prohibits antibiotic use at any stage of producing milk, meat, poultry, eggs, and aquaculture. Banned substances include:
Potential Issues & Challenges
- Enforcement Challenges: Small-scale farmers often rely on low-cost antibiotics, and veterinary drugs are frequently used without prescriptions.
- Robust inspection and testing mechanisms are essential to ensure compliance.
- Fragmented Oversight: Regulatory responsibilities are split across multiple ministries — health, agriculture, and environment — leading to incoherent policy enforcement.
- Weak Surveillance: India lacks a centralized AMR database, making it difficult to track resistance patterns and antibiotic consumption.
- Environmental Impact: Pharmaceutical waste containing antibiotic residues is often discharged into water bodies, further spreading resistance.
Global Implications
- India is one of the largest producers and exporters of animal-derived food products.
- Implications for Trade and Public Health:
- Public Health: Curbing AMR through responsible antibiotic use and safeguarding medically important antimicrobials for human use.
- Trade Compliance: Aligning with EU’s antimicrobial regulations to sustain and expand access to premium export markets.
- By aligning its standards with international norms, the country aims to:
- Maintain its global market position;
- Reduce AMR risks linked to food exports;
- Promote sustainable livestock farming practices
Way Forward:
- One Health Approach: India’s strategy reflects the WHO’s ‘One Health’ framework, which recognizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health.
- By curbing antibiotic misuse in agriculture, India hopes to preserve the efficacy of life-saving drugs for future generations.
- Strengthen Enforcement: Implement and monitor prescription-only sales and crack down on illegal antibiotic distribution.
- Educate Stakeholders: Launch awareness campaigns for doctors, pharmacists, farmers, and the public.
- Invest in Surveillance: Build robust systems to track antibiotic use and resistance trends across sectors.
- Promote Alternatives: Encourage vaccination, hygiene, and biosecurity in farming to reduce reliance on antibiotics.
| Daily Mains Practice Question [Q] Will India’s new antibiotic regulations in food animal production help tackle global antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and what challenges might hinder their enforcement? |
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