Tuesday, November 3, 2009

ASPCA alret on the Preseervation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act

ASPCA Urgent Alert

Dear Animal Advocates,

Championed for over 10 years by the late Senator Edward Kennedy, the Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act (PAMTA) is a federal bill that would phase out the common practice of constantly feeding antibiotics to food animals when they aren't sick.
http://www2.aspca.org/site/R?i=6NDs8wgKrKfORiIfQiVjqQ..

Large-scale livestock and poultry producers have become overly reliant on antibiotics. By keeping animals on these drugs all the time, factory farms can become ever more overcrowded and unsanitary while circumventing the disease outbreaks that these poor conditions ordinarily would produce. Therefore, curbing the use of antibiotics may prove to be an incentive to raise animals using more humane and sustainable methods.

This is not only an animal welfare issue, however: it is also an issue of human health. Scientists agree that the overuse of antibiotics in animal agriculture is contributing to the increase in antibiotic-resistant human diseases. These illnesses are especially costly and difficult to treat.

What You Can Do
Visit the ASPCA Advocacy Center online to email your U.S. senators and representative urging them to support and co sponsor the Preservation of Antibiotics for Medical Treatment Act. You may use the same link to read about this legislation in greater depth.
http://www2.aspca.org/site/R?i=NL5mHJFby70rTwUSfB5KvQ..

Thank you so much for supporting the ASPCA and our nation's animals.

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