I am for them being pulled, banned whatever you wish to call it does anyone recall when vet techs did basic surgeries not being in the loop anymore I am unaware if the veterinary board had a hand in this also
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Yes and... If antibiotics can be sold to make a quick profit, overuse and use for the wrong reasons will happen. Worldwide there is already an increase of resistent bacteria.I'm not too sad to see them being made to require a prescription now. Sure, it makes it more difficult for people to obtain the antibiotics if they need them, but they are also overused, so it is time for the "greater good" to be taken into consideration.
I posted a thread about antibiotic use earlier this year: https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/the-implications-of-antibiotic-use.1296394/
People are very caught up in their own selfish desires, it will cost them money to obtain a prescription for the antibiotics from a vet, but it is time for safeguards to be enacted to prevent antibiotic overuse. For those complaining about the burden to convenience in obtaining antibiotics, it'll be even less convenient for you if vet-prescribed antibiotics stop working on your animals, due to resistance caused by overuse, or if an antibiotic resistant zoonotic pathogen emerges which starts killing your friends and family.
Breeding for resistance is a joke. The only thing that has bred for resistance is bacteria. NAME ONE poultry disease that has been eliminated through breeding for resistance or through holistic means or antibiotic treatments.I think the best solution here is to just not use them. Then there is no worry of shelf life, no border crossing, no vet bills and no prescription needed.
Either go holistic or breed for resistance. Bacteria isn't a virus like Marek's. It can be bred for resistance. A bacteria fails as a pathogen if it kills off all of its hosts before it can spread. So therefore, proper biosecurity and management practices should either solve or manage a problem outbreak.
Dont you love government regulation?If you keep livestock here in this part of Catalonia, I believe the same applies in other areas in Spain and in some other countries, you have to register the creatures with your local council. They send a vet to take blood once a year and can, although such inspections are rare, come and inspect the conditions you keep the animals in.
For most livestock and many pets at some point they will get sick and/or injured. There are always exceptions but most people with say a sick or injured dog will take it to a vet.
For some unfathomable reason some chicken keepers think it's fine to carry out surgery and administer whatever drugs they can acquire without any professional guidance and checking to see if they can get vet care for the animals they get seems to be a bit of an after thought.
Perhaps some good advice would be don't get chickens, or any other creatures if you cannot access the necessary professional health care who can prescribe the correct medication.
Not love no, but I appreciate they are necessary for the good of all.Dont you love government regulation?
The good of all lol. I'm not gonna get political. We've heard that before lol. I'll leave it at that.Not love no, but I appreciate they are necessary for the good of all.
Dont you love government regulation?
The next thing they'll tell you is to register your toilet paper, tell you how much you're alloted in a one month and how many sheets you can use in one week. Then they'll tax you to death ie, a use tax, a wipe tax, then another water use tax on top of the water bill, maybe a flushometer to add to your water bill, or even add it onto property taxes so you wont notice it. Yeah, I love micromanagement and government interference.