It's been a busy few weeks here at Casa Superbug -- including some conference appearances, more on them later -- so the first thing I'd like to do is point out some things that appeared while I was offline. Notably: In editorials, three newspapers recently challenged the way antibiotics are used on farms and asked why we can't do better.
Most important, because it has the biggest circulation: USA TODAY, which on Oct. 27 asked:
The piece, ascribed to USA TODAY's editorial board, is skeptical of the FDA's plan for voluntary control of growth-promoter antibiotics in livestock raising:
A few weeks earlier, the San Jose Mercury News was even more blunt. In a piece headlined "Stop pumping farm animals full of antibiotics" and also written by its editorial board,that paper said:
The editorial calls for state law to ban or label meat raised with antibiotics, knowing such legislation would have real effect:
The Press-Enterprise of Riverside, Calif. made similar points with a similar call for action:
It's not uncommon for the op-ed pages of newspapers to feature calls for action. Op-eds, unlike editorials, are written by interested third parties. But when a newspaper speaks from the editorial page, it is speaking with the voice of the paper's brand and the power of its circulation. Papers usually reserve that firepower for issues of real public importance. That three newspapers did that in the course of a few weeks suggests to me that public opinion may be turning against ag overuse of antibiotics for real.