Aug 6, 2017
STATE TO BAN MANUFACTURE, SALE OF PAAN MASALA AND GUTKA
The state government is likely to ban manufacture and sale of ‘paan masala’ and ‘guthaka’ in the state. The Yogi government has already banned the use of paan masala and tobacco products in the Secretariat and other government buildings housing offices.
Health minister Siddarthnath Singh said on Saturday that the government has already taken a serious view on consumption of the two products and associated health hazards. He said that soon the state government would take measures for closing down factories manufacturing ‘gutkha’ and ‘paan masala’ across the state.
Soon after taking over as Chief Minister on March 19, Yogi Adityanath had banned chewing of paan and guthaka in all government offices in UP. The CM took the decision after an inspection of the Secretariat Annexe housing the CM’s office in March. Yogi was furious when he came across rust-coloured stains of paan and pan masala on stairs of the Secretariat building.
It may be stated her that following orders of Allahabad High Court, the sale and manufacture of paan masala and tobacco mixed guthka, are already banned in the state. Despite the ban, both products are being manufactured and marketed in the state.
In October, 2012, the then Akhilesh Yadav government had imposed a ban on gutkha (paan masala mixed with tobacco) as per the Allahabad High Court order and Food Security Act passed by the Parliament.
Though the court order was to be effective from April 1, 2013, the state government said that six months time has been given to find other source of employment for people rendered jobless by the ban.
In September, 2012, the Allahabad High court directed the UP government to restrain manufacturing, sale and distribution of ‘gutkha’ in the state. The court passed the order as per provisions of Food Safety Act, while disposing a Public Interest Litigation filed by Indian Dental Association.
As many as 13 states in India have already imposed a ban on the sale of gutkha which is the root cause for oral cancer and has increased manifold in the last few years. The state government was earlier reluctant to ban gutkha because of the massive revenue earnings through sales which is over Rs 300 crore.
As per an estimate, some 2.5 lakh people are struggling with cancer in UP. Of this, 75,000 are cases of oral and mouth cancer, mainly due to chewing of tobacco, gutkha or paan masala.
Gutkha factories will be closed in UP: Yogi Sarkar
UP: Now after the complete ban on liquor in Bihar, the Uttar Pradesh government has decided to put a complete ban on Gutkha. Under this, it is very soon preparing to close the Gutkha factory in the state. UP government cabinet minister Siddhartha Nath Singh, who arrived in Noida on Friday, said that the state government is very soon going to ban the entire Gutkha factory in UP. He said that the Yogi Government had already banned Gutkha in government offices but now it has been decided that the Gutkha factories will be closed from the state. During all this, UP Health Minister Siddhartha Nath Singh and Health Education Minister Gopal Tandon inaugurated 10 Operation Theater and Heart Wing at Trauma Center, Sector-27.
TV Prevention Campaign Begins
On this occasion, the Health Minister introduced a campaign to identify the TV patients in the district and to prevent this disease. According to a report released by the Primary Health Center, the number of TV patients in the district is continuously increasing because of which this program has been started.
Supreme Court has put a ban on Gutka
On the directive of the Supreme Court, the sale of Gutka has been banned. Pan masala and tobacco are being sold in shops even after the sale of gutkha is prohibited. On the sale of pan masala and tobacco in different pouches, action will be taken on the related construction companies, sales agencies and shopkeepers under Food Safety and Standards Act 2006.
Pouch do not fall into the category of food
According to Section 2, 3 and 4 of the Food and Safety Act 2011, tobacco products are not considered in the category of food items. That's why Gutkha is being shut down. People are prone to illness due to nicotine in them.
As soon as the ban of gutkha is announced in the state, some companies have been preparing to sell gutkha in the second form. A company has started selling tobacco and pan masala in different packets so that it is not considered to be a gutka.
Antibiotics use by India’s poultry farms endangering human lives, says expert
Ramanan Laxminarayan, director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy, Washington DC and New Delhi, says most of the poultry feed available in the Indian market is medicated, but the majority of farmers were unaware of the presence of antibiotic growth promoters premixed in chicken feed.
A study has found rampant misuse of antibiotics in Indian poultry farms, endangering the health of people.
Antibiotics are being routinely administered to chickens on Indian poultry farms in small doses to promote growth and keep disease at bay, almost as a replacement for nutrition and sanitation, says a new study led by Ramanan Laxminarayan, director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy, Washington DC and New Delhi. The study has been published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
Twelve of the 18 farms studied, or 67%, reported the use of antimicrobials as growth boosters. Tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones, antibiotics commonly used to treat cholera, malaria, respiratory and urinary tract infections in humans, were the most commonly used antimicrobials, with nine farms admitting their use.
This has serious implications for India — already the world’s biggest consumer of antibiotics for human use—and the world because it contributes to the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Antibiotics fascinate Laxminarayan because they “underpin our modern healthcare system”, he said. As someone who has dedicated himself to the understanding of drug resistance as a problem of managing a shared global resource, he found the lack of awareness about antibiotics in India appalling. Consumers in India, it would seem, are largely indifferent to the circumstances in which their butter chicken is bred.
In an interview to IndiaSpend, Laxminarayan talked of the consumer’s role in reforming the poultry industry, particularly because of the fast-growing popularity of chicken in India and a 312% antibiotic-use increase projected for livestock.
Ramanan Laxminarayan is the director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy, Washington DC and New Delhi.
Laxminarayan is an engineer from the Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani, and earned a doctorate in economics and a master’s in epidemiology from the University of Washington, Seattle, setting him up for a career in public health research, his passion. He continues to be associated with the University of Washington, as also with Princeton University, the University of Strathclyde, the John Hopkins School of Public Health and the University of Kwazulu Natal in South Africa. Between 2011 and 2015, he was responsible for expanding the research and policy programme at the Public Health Foundation of India.
Q: Chickens that are provided good nutrition, clean water and kept in hygienic pens don’t need antibiotics. Consumers abroad are aware of concepts like free-range chicken farming and pastured poultry which require that animals be reared ethically. But Indian consumers remain largely ignorant of these issues. You found that here, antibiotics are being used as a cheap substitute for basic nutrition and treatment. In the 18 farms you visited, you found large flocks, more than 50,000 birds, kept in confined areas lacking proper sanitation. To what extent does the lack of consumer awareness in India impede reform? What are the laws on the use of antibiotics as growth promoters in the poultry industry in the US, the European Union and India?
As far back as 1986, Sweden banned the use of antibiotics as growth promoters in the poultry industry as a result of consumer awareness. Consumer movements in the EU and the US have played a major role in introducing poultry farming standards and legislation to regulate the use of antibiotics. In 2006, the EU banned the use of antibiotics used in humans as poultry growth promoters. In 2015, the US introduced the veterinary feed directive whereby the use of drugs on the veterinary feed directive list is permitted only under the professional supervision of a licensed veterinarian. This is a step in the right direction.
Government agencies in India including the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization and the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India have the regulatory authority to impose restrictions on the use of antibiotics as growth promoters in poultry but have not moved in this direction so far.
In India, low farmer awareness is as much a concern as low consumer awareness. In the absence of regulation, most of the poultry feed available in the market is medicated. But the majority of the farmers we surveyed reported being unaware of the presence of antibiotic growth promoters premixed in chicken feed purchased from feed mills. Some farmers are genuinely unaware of the potential harm from using antibiotics as growth promoters. One farmer noted that antimicrobials were more effective than hygiene or sanitation measures because the labour on poultry farms is unskilled. Of course, this is an excuse to continue misusing antibiotics. India saw demonetisation happen overnight. If a similar will is exercised by the state and central governments to check the rampant misuse of antibiotics, we could see great change happen soon.
Q: Indian consumers are mostly not aware that meat infected with antibiotic-resistant bacteria could make you sick. Why does this happen? Doesn’t cooking meat at high temperatures, as we do in India, kill all bacteria? Also, your study says that “direct contact with livestock colonized with resistant bacteria is the most documented route of resistance transmission from the agricultural reservoir into human populations”. This means that farm hands are more likely to spread antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections, especially considering that 67% of the workers you interviewed confessed to taking no precautions to protect themselves from poultry shed infections.
Multiple pathways exist whereby all people, including those consuming chicken raised on farms misusing antibiotics, are affected.
For instance, when you eat chicken sourced from poultry raised on growth promoters, you ingest antibiotic-resistant bacteria that were harboured within the chicken. Those bacteria can make you sick. However, those bacteria do not respond to conventionally prescribed antibiotics so your sickness is hard to treat or can even be untreatable. Cooking at a high temperature kills all bacteria but uncooked meat can harbour resistant bacteria. Also, heat cannot break down some of the antibiotic residues that may have remained within the meat.
Also, farm workers’ feet and other body parts are exposed to infected poultry or they breath in the antibiotic-resistant bacteria suspended in the air. Workers can acquire an infection that is not treatable, which they can spread, through direct contact with relatives or through the aerial route.
These and other pathways are all significant. We cannot predict which exposure route will prove to be more dangerous for Indian consumers.
Q: Consumers are bombarded with findings of pesticide residue in vegetables, fruit and milk. This has resulted in a certain resignation – that almost all (if not all) food products carry some toxin or the other, so they have little choice. Would you say that antibiotic-resistant bacteria are a bigger concern than pesticide residue in agricultural produce?
We hear of cyanide being used to artificially ripen farm produce and other pesticides being excessively used. Pesticide residues in vegetables and fruits gradually impact the body. These toxins gradually build up in the body and eventually can make you sick. Antibiotic-resistant bacterial residues in poultry are a problem when the meat is insufficiently cooked and there are food borne infections. Both these issues are serious concerns.
Q: Your study evaluated resistance to 11 antibiotics: ampicillin, ceftriaxone, cefuroxime, chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, co-trimoxazole, gentamicin, imipenem, nalidixic acid, nitrofurantoin and tetracycline. What diseases do these antibiotics help treat? Would medicine suffer a setback if these were no longer available?
Modern healthcare, as we know it, would be impossible to practice without antibiotics, and many of these 11 antibiotics play a major role. Most of these are broad-spectrum drugs prescribed for a variety of diseases like respiratory infections, diarrhoea, urinary tract infections, etc. Our study included ciprofloxacin, which belongs to the fluoroquinolone class, and is one of the most widely prescribed antibiotics for people in India. Losing these medicines would be a massive loss to humanity; it could cause many more people to die from common infectious diseases. Consumer awareness can play a major role in preserving these important tools of modern medicine.
Q: You found that poultry farms that produce meat were twice as likely as those that only produce eggs to harbour the ESBL-positive bacteria that is particularly difficult to treat in humans. Also, the prevalence of multiple-drug resistant bacteria in meat farms was 94% as against the 60% in egg farms. And, meat farms were between 2.2 and 23 times more likely than egg farms to harbour Escherichia coli (E. coli), a bacteria that causes diarrhoea and is resistant to multiple antibiotics. This includes ciprofloxacin, used to treat respiratory infections, and nalidixic acid, used for treating urinary tract infections. Is it correct to infer that it is less dangerous to consume eggs than it is to consume poultry (meat)?
From an antibiotic resistance standpoint, it may be safer to eat eggs than to eat poultry. Broilers (animals raised for meat) are fed more antibiotics than layers (hens laying eggs) since the producer’s goal is to increase weight gain over a short period of time.
Q: You found that independent farms had a higher risk of E. coli resistant to all the antibiotics tested (apart from nitrofuration) as compared to contracted farms. Why should the farm type impact the risk of antibiotic-resistant bacteria?
Contracted farming operations by large-scale poultry producers rely on small scale farmers to supply the land and labour to raise poultry. Contracted farm managers are obligated to adhere to all instructions, protocols and production processes established by the producer. All their input materials such as the day-old chicks, feed, antimicrobials, etc. are supplied by the contracting firm. It is possible that contract farms are using some good practices, but I must note that the difference between contract and independent farms was not statistically significant.
(Bahri is a freelance writer and editor based in Mount Abu, Rajasthan.)
Unhygienic ‘cherry’ unit raided in Anantapur
The unit apparently had no license or permission to prepare cherry fruits with ripened papaya fruits.
ANANTAPUR: A team from Food Safety and Standards Authority of Anantapur raided on an agro tech industry near TV tower area here on Friday and registered cases for not maintaining hygienic conditions at the unit. The unit apparently had no license or permission to prepare cherry fruits with ripened papaya fruits. Food safety district official Mr Nageswariah Sastry and his team which raided the Manikanta Agro Tech Industry located near TV tower area on outskirts of Anantapur headquarters, based on complaints, noticed a shocking violation of norms and very unhygienic conditions at the unit. The papaya fruits being used to prepare the cherry fruits were totally damaged and spoilt.
“The unit organisers failed to produce papers about the licenses. The unit did not have licences for the machinery being used or for the food products,” the official said. He added that the process was in unhygienic condition. The team collected samples of the papaya fruits. The local tahsildar was also informed about the condition and proposed to seize the unit.
D&FCO conducts market checking in Jammu
JAMMU, Aug 5: In order to ensure availability of safe and wholesome food articles to the general public especially on the eve of ensuing festival season, a team of Drugs & Food Control Organization (D&FCO) officials today conducted surprise market checking at various places in the Jammu district.
The team visited Channi Himmat, Bus Stand, Purani Mandi, Gandhi Nagar, New Plot etc and inspected various Food Business Vendors during which samples of Khoya, Burfi, Milk Cake, Gulab Jamun, and Malpura were lifted for quality check.
"Food Business operators are hereby advised to strictly adhere to the provisions laid under Food Safety and Standards Act and maintain high standards of sanitary and hygienic conditions to guarantee safe food to end users and to carry out the food business after obtaining proper food licenses, a statement of the D&FCO said.
Get food license a day after application is received: FSDA
To clamp down on prevailing corruption in the food safety department, the state government has directed it to issue food licenses within one day after applications are received online. Earlier, it used to take two months for obtaining a license.
To clamp down on prevailing corruption in the food safety department, the state government has directed it to issue food licenses within one day after applications are received online. Earlier, it used to take two months for obtaining a license. After issuing the license, the FSDA will conduct a spot inspection of the establishment and in case they find any discrepancy, they will have the authority to suspend or cancel the permit.
The decision will benefit lakhs of retail shop owners across the state who were earlier forced to make several rounds of the FSDA office. However, those who are involved in sale of meat related products have been kept out of this category.
FSDA assistant commissioner Vinit Kumar said, “The move is aimed at curbing harassment of businessmen in the state. Licenses to retail shops, except for those who are involved in meat business whose establishments (restaurants) require hygiene evaluation, will be issued without any delay. Moreover, they will not be required to visit the office for this purpose as the license will be issued online.”
Earlier, it took one month for issuing registration and two months for issuing the license. In case the deadline is not met, the official concerned will be held responsible and have to give reasons for denying a permit, the FSDA official added.
On why meat vendors and restaurants were not in this category, Kumar said they need an NoC from various departments.
According to officials, the new system is likely to benefit small business houses and fruits and vegetable sellers, who otherwise avoid taking a license. A fee is Rs 100 will have to be paid by those whose business turnover is below Rs 12 lakh per annum. If the turnover is above this limit, the applicant will have to pay Rs 2,000. License would be for a period ranging from one to five years.
Kumar said, “If anyone faces any sort of problem or is asked to pay a bribe, they can directly call on my number and register a complaint. I will ensure that such cases are resolved immediately.”
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