WASHINGTON
(AP) -- In an encouraging development for consumers worried about
antibiotics in their milk, a new Food and Drug Administration study
showed little evidence of drug contamination after surveying almost
2,000 dairy farms.
In response to concerns,
the agency in 2012 took samples of raw milk from the farms and tested
them for 31 drugs, almost all of them antibiotics. Results released by
the agency Thursday show that less than 1 percent of the total samples
showed illegal drug residue.
Antibiotics and
other drugs can end up in milk when they are used on dairy cows to keep
them healthy. Small levels of some drugs are allowed in milk, but
residues that go beyond certain thresholds are illegal.
"Overall
this is very encouraging and reinforces the idea that the milk supply
is safe," said the FDA's William Flynn, who led the study. He said the
agency will use the findings to try and reduce the drug contamination
even more.
Public health groups are concerned
about the levels of animal antibiotics that make it into food because
consuming the drugs could potentially be harmful to humans. Repeated
exposure to antibiotics can lead germs to become resistant to the drugs
so that they are no longer effective. Drug residues can also be harmful
if they prompt allergies or other reactions.
The
industry does regular testing for some of the drugs the FDA tested, but
public health advocates had expressed particular concern about milk
that had come from dairy farms that had repeatedly tried to sell older
cows for slaughter with illegal levels of antibiotic residue in their
tissue. So the FDA study focused on those farms with previous
violations, with about half of the samples coming from them and half
from a control group.
FDA said 11 of the
samples from the group with previous violations showed illegal levels of
drug residue and four from the control group showed illegal residue.
Flynn said the illegal drug residues found in the study were from
unapproved drugs, so any level is illegal.
The agency said the study was blind, so no violations would be reported.
The
milk industry balked when the FDA first announced the study in 2010,
expressing concerns that the broad testing would disrupt the milk
supply. After negotiations, the testing began in 2012 and the agency
spent the next two years analyzing the results.
The industry praised the study as it was released.
"These
results are great, but we still are aiming for zero positives in the
future," said Jim Mulhern, CEO of the National Milk Producers
Federation.
David Plunkett of the Center for
Science in the Public Interest says the study shows that drug residues
are "a small problem" but that there should be expanded testing to bring
the levels down even further.
"The fact that it is a small problem indicates it's a problem we should be able to resolve," Plunkett saidSOURCE.
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