The National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) today praised Congress for approving legislation to reauthorize animal-drug review laws that will give pork producers access to products that safeguard animal and public health.
The House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a bill to reauthorize for five years the Animal Drug User Fee Act (ADUFA) and the Animal Generic Drug User Fee Act (AGDUFA). The House took up the measure (S. 622) approved by unanimous consent in the Senate May 8.
First enacted in 2003, ADUFA and AGDUFA allow the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to collect fees from animal health companies for the review and approval of animal health products, including ones for farm animals and pets. The fees supplement the agency’s annual congressionally-approved appropriations and have enabled the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to dramatically reduce its review time for new animal drugs, bringing medications to market more quickly while maintaining high standards for safety and effectiveness.
The legislation was approved without amendments. Opponents of modern livestock production had threatened to offer provisions to restrict from use in food animal production certain antibiotics and to require reporting of on-farm uses of animal health products. [FDA already collects antibiotics sales data, which a number of groups have misused in efforts to blame animal agriculture for the rise of antibiotic-resistant illnesses in people.]
Since ADUFA and AGDUFA were signed into law, several new swine health products have come on the market, helping producers fight swine respiratory and other diseases. In the past five years, veterinarians and pet owners received more than a dozen new products to help pets live longer, healthier lives.
Source: National Hog Farmer/National Pork Producers Council