The way in which the United States has come to practice agriculture has changed drastically over the past century. As urban populations have grown and rural populations dwindled, research focused on raising production levels and decreasing costs led to the increasingly common practice of low-dose and long-term application of antibiotics to animals being raised for slaughter. Such use of antibiotics continues to have far-reaching consequences impacting human, animal, and environmental health and wellness. This article examines the fractured federal oversight of the use of antibiotics in industrial agriculture and proposes an interpretation of provisions of the Clean Water Act as a mechanism for mitigation
In the early 1970s, the seemingly banal and nondescript matter of the subtherapeutic use of antibiot...
There is a growing demand for livestock products and by-products due to an increase in the human pop...
A world in which no cure exists for strep throat, pneumonia, Lyme disease, or tetanus is closer than...
The way in which the United States has come to practice agriculture has changed drastically over the...
In Partial Fulfillment of the Master of Science, Technology and Environmental Policy Degree Require...
This Note explores antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains in humans and their roots in American indu...
Introduction Antibiotic1 use in animal production has led to improved feed use efficiency and increa...
What about antibiotics from livestock production entering the environment? Will antibiotics used in ...
What social, economic, or political factors affect the way antibiotic use is regulated in the US? In...
Environmental factors play a major part in human health. Environmental pollutants are often as poiso...
There is currently global concern over rising levels of antibiotic resistance among commensal and pa...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
For decades, antibiotics have been widely used, saving lives and reducing suffering. Such drugs are ...
For decades, the U.S. meat industry has fed medically important antibiotics to chickens, pigs, and c...
Antibiotics were the world’s great therapeutic hope after the Second World War, but today, unmonitor...
In the early 1970s, the seemingly banal and nondescript matter of the subtherapeutic use of antibiot...
There is a growing demand for livestock products and by-products due to an increase in the human pop...
A world in which no cure exists for strep throat, pneumonia, Lyme disease, or tetanus is closer than...
The way in which the United States has come to practice agriculture has changed drastically over the...
In Partial Fulfillment of the Master of Science, Technology and Environmental Policy Degree Require...
This Note explores antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains in humans and their roots in American indu...
Introduction Antibiotic1 use in animal production has led to improved feed use efficiency and increa...
What about antibiotics from livestock production entering the environment? Will antibiotics used in ...
What social, economic, or political factors affect the way antibiotic use is regulated in the US? In...
Environmental factors play a major part in human health. Environmental pollutants are often as poiso...
There is currently global concern over rising levels of antibiotic resistance among commensal and pa...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
For decades, antibiotics have been widely used, saving lives and reducing suffering. Such drugs are ...
For decades, the U.S. meat industry has fed medically important antibiotics to chickens, pigs, and c...
Antibiotics were the world’s great therapeutic hope after the Second World War, but today, unmonitor...
In the early 1970s, the seemingly banal and nondescript matter of the subtherapeutic use of antibiot...
There is a growing demand for livestock products and by-products due to an increase in the human pop...
A world in which no cure exists for strep throat, pneumonia, Lyme disease, or tetanus is closer than...