S02871 Summary:

BILL NOS02871A
 
SAME ASSAME AS A03493-B
 
SPONSORKAVANAGH
 
COSPNSRBIAGGI, GOUNARDES, HARCKHAM, HOYLMAN, KAPLAN, KRUEGER, MYRIE, PALUMBO, PARKER, RIVERA, SANDERS, SEPULVEDA, SERRANO
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 135-A §§6720 - 6728, Ed L; add §97-j, St Fin L
 
Protects medically important antimicrobials for human public health; establishes a livestock producer may provide a medically important antimicrobial to a food-producing animal only if a licensed veterinarian, in the exercise of professional judgment, determines that the provision of the medically important antimicrobial to the animal is necessary: to control the spread of a disease or infection, to treat a disease or infection, or in relation to surgical or other medical procedures; requires veterinarians licensed to practice in New York state to file an annual report detailing their prescribing history of medically important antimicrobials to food-producing animals.
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S02871 Actions:

BILL NOS02871A
 
01/26/2021REFERRED TO HIGHER EDUCATION
04/29/2021AMEND AND RECOMMIT TO HIGHER EDUCATION
04/29/2021PRINT NUMBER 2871A
01/05/2022REFERRED TO HIGHER EDUCATION
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S02871 Committee Votes:

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S02871 Floor Votes:

There are no votes for this bill in this legislative session.
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S02871 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         2871--A
 
                               2021-2022 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                    January 26, 2021
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  Sens.  KAVANAGH,  BIAGGI,  GOUNARDES, HARCKHAM, HOYLMAN,
          KAPLAN, KRUEGER, MYRIE, PALUMBO, PARKER, RIVERA,  SANDERS,  SEPULVEDA,
          SERRANO  --  read  twice  and  ordered printed, and when printed to be
          committed  to  the  Committee  on  Higher   Education   --   committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to said committee
 
        AN ACT to amend the education law and the state finance law, in relation
          to  protecting  medically  important  antimicrobials  for human public
          health
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section  1.  Legislative  findings.  The legislature declares that the
     2  overuse and misuse of medically important antimicrobials poses a serious
     3  public health threat.
     4    The World Health Organization has stated that "without urgent, coordi-
     5  nated action by many stakeholders, the world is headed for a  post-anti-
     6  biotic  era,  in  which  common infections and minor injuries which have
     7  been treatable for decades can once again kill." In 2016, members of the
     8  UN General Assembly adopted a political declaration  acknowledging  that
     9  "the resistance of bacterial, viral, parasitic and fungal microorganisms
    10  to  antimicrobial medicines that were previously effective for treatment
    11  of infections is mainly due to: the inappropriate use  of  antimicrobial
    12  medicines  in  public  health, animal, food, agriculture and aquaculture
    13  sectors; ... resistance to antibiotics, which are not like  other  medi-
    14  cines  ...  is  the  greatest  and  most  urgent  global risk, requiring
    15  increased attention and coherence at  the  international,  national  and
    16  regional levels."
    17    The  legislature  further  finds  that overuse and misuse of medically
    18  important antimicrobials in livestock production is a significant compo-
    19  nent of the threat posed. The United States Food and Drug Administration
    20  and the Centers for Disease Control  and  Prevention  have  stated  that
    21  there  is  a definitive link between the routine use of medically impor-
    22  tant antimicrobials on industrial farms and the crisis  of  antimicrobi-
    23  al-resistant infections in humans.
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD00777-04-1

        S. 2871--A                          2
 
     1    The  issue  of  antimicrobial misuse and overuse, whether in people or
     2  animals, is a significant and urgent public health matter.
     3    It  has been estimated that seventy percent of all antimicrobials sold
     4  in the United States are for use in  food-producing  animals,  often  to
     5  compensate  for  the effects of unsanitary and overcrowded conditions on
     6  farms.
     7    Many of the antimicrobials  provided  to  food-producing  animals  are
     8  identical to, or from the same class as, drugs used in human medicine to
     9  treat  serious conditions (i.e., medically important drugs). Thus, anti-
    10  microbial-resistant bacteria that emerge and spread from  food-producing
    11  animals  in farm settings to infect humans can be very dangerous because
    12  the antibiotics usually used to treat the infections in  humans  may  no
    13  longer be effective against them.
    14    The  legislature  further  finds  that,  as  with any use of medically
    15  important antimicrobials in animals, such use must be closely supervised
    16  by a New York state licensed veterinarian or those veterinarians author-
    17  ized to practice within the state. Moreover, that  it  is  the  licensed
    18  veterinarian who must ensure that the use of medically important antimi-
    19  crobials is appropriate and necessary.
    20    The legislature therefore intends to place appropriate restrictions on
    21  the  misuse  and  overuse of medically important antimicrobials in food-
    22  producing animals by ensuring that veterinarians have the clear authori-
    23  ty to control the use of medically important antimicrobials in food-pro-
    24  ducing animals in New York state and that their practices are  following
    25  the best scientific evidence.
    26    The  purpose of this act is to protect public health by preserving the
    27  effectiveness of medically important antimicrobials now and  for  future
    28  generations  by eliminating the use of those medicines in food-producing
    29  animals for disease prevention, resulting in a reduction in the rise and
    30  spread of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria  and  antimicrobial-resistant
    31  infections in humans.
    32    §  2.  The  education  law is amended by adding a new article 135-A to
    33  read as follows:
    34                                ARTICLE 135-A
    35                   COMBATING ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE ACT
    36  Section 6720. Short title.
    37          6721. Definitions.
    38          6722. Prohibition of certain antimicrobial administration.
    39          6723. Authorization of certain antimicrobial administration.
    40          6724. Annual reports.
    41          6725. Antimicrobial stewardship guidelines.
    42          6726. Implementation.
    43          6727. Authority to receive Veterinary Feed Directives.
    44          6728. Violations.
    45    § 6720. Short title. This act shall be known and may be cited  as  the
    46  "combating antimicrobial resistance act of 2021."
    47    § 6721. Definitions. As used in this section:
    48    1.  "Antimicrobial" means any substance of natural, semi-synthetic, or
    49  synthetic origin that at in vivo concentrations kills  or  inhibits  the
    50  growth of microorganisms by interacting with a specific target. The term
    51  antimicrobial  is a collective for antiviral, antibacterial, antifungal,
    52  antiparasitic, and antiprotozoal agents.
    53    2. "Antimicrobial  class"  means  antimicrobial  agents  with  related
    54  molecular  structures,  often  with  a similar mode of action because of
    55  interaction with a similar target and thus subject to  a  similar  mech-
    56  anism of resistance.

        S. 2871--A                          3
 
     1    3. "Antimicrobial resistance (AMR)" means the ability of a microorgan-
     2  ism  to  multiply or persist in the presence of an increased level of an
     3  antimicrobial relative  to  the  susceptible  counterpart  of  the  same
     4  species.
     5    4. "Disease control" means administration of antimicrobial agents to a
     6  group of animals containing sick and healthy individuals (presumed to be
     7  infected),  to  minimize or resolve clinical signs of infectious disease
     8  and to prevent further spread of the disease.
     9    5. "Disease prevention" means administration of  antimicrobial  agents
    10  to  an  individual or a group of animals at risk of acquiring a specific
    11  infection or in a specific situation where infectious disease is  likely
    12  to occur if the antimicrobial agent is not administered.
    13    6.  (a)  "Disease  treatment"  means  administration  of antimicrobial
    14  agents to an individual or group of animals showing  clinical  signs  of
    15  infectious disease or that test positive for a disease.
    16    (b)  Disease  treatment  includes  selective  dry cow therapy, whereby
    17  individual dairy cows within a herd are determined, when entering a  dry
    18  cycle,  to  be  likely  infected  with  mastitis based on key indicators
    19  including their previous history of disease, somatic cell counts  and/or
    20  cell  cultures,  and  are  administered  antibiotics  as prescribed by a
    21  licensed veterinarian.
    22    7. "Food-producing animal" means:
    23    (a) All cattle, swine, or poultry, regardless of whether the  specific
    24  animal  is  raised  for the purpose of producing food for human consump-
    25  tion; or
    26    (b) Any animal of a  type  that  the  department  of  agriculture  and
    27  markets  identifies  by rule as livestock typically used to produce food
    28  for human consumption, including aquatic and amphibian species.
    29    8. "Livestock producer" means a person raising a food-producing animal
    30  for commercial purposes.
    31    9. "Medically important antimicrobial" means a drug that  is  composed
    32  in whole or in part of:
    33    (a)  A  form  of  the  antibiotic  classes of penicillin, tetracyline,
    34  macrolide, lincosamide, streptogramin, aminoglycoside,  sulfonamide,  or
    35  cephalosporin; or
    36    (b)  A  drug  from an antimicrobial class that is categorized as crit-
    37  ically important, highly important, or important  in  the  World  Health
    38  Organization list of Critically Important Antimicrobials for Human Medi-
    39  cine  (5th  Revision, 2016), or a subsequent revision or successor docu-
    40  ment issued by the World Health Organization that is recognized by  rule
    41  by the department of health.
    42    10.  "Veterinary Feed Directive" has the same definition as in section
    43  558.3 of title 21 of the code of federal regulations.
    44    § 6722. Prohibition of certain antimicrobial administration.    Begin-
    45  ning January first, two thousand twenty-three, medically important anti-
    46  microbials  shall  not be administered to a food-producing animal unless
    47  ordered by a licensed veterinarian who has visited  the  farm  operation
    48  within  the  previous  six  months, through a prescription or Veterinary
    49  Feed Directive, pursuant to a  veterinarian-client-patient  relationship
    50  that  meets  the requirements as defined by the New York state office of
    51  professions.
    52    § 6723. Authorization  of  certain  antimicrobial  administration.  1.
    53  Beginning January first, two thousand twenty-three, a livestock producer
    54  may  provide  a  medically  important  antimicrobial to a food-producing
    55  animal only if a licensed veterinarian, in the exercise of  professional

        S. 2871--A                          4
 
     1  judgment, determines that the provision of the medically important anti-
     2  microbial to the animal is necessary:
     3    (a) To control the spread of a disease or infection;
     4    (b) To treat a disease or infection; or
     5    (c) In relation to surgical or other medical procedures.
     6    2. (a) Medically important antimicrobials shall not be administered by
     7  any  person to food-producing animals solely for the purposes of promot-
     8  ing weight gain, improving feed efficiency, or disease prevention.
     9    (b) Blanket dry cow therapy, whereby all dairy cows in a herd entering
    10  a dry cycle are routinely administered an antibiotic to prevent clinical
    11  mastitis, is considered a method  of  disease  prevention,  and  is  not
    12  authorized.
    13    3.  A  veterinarian  who  determines that the provision of a medically
    14  important antimicrobial to a food-producing animal is  necessary  for  a
    15  purpose  described  in  this  section  shall specify an end date for the
    16  provision of the antimicrobial to the animal.
    17    4. A livestock producer may administer a medically  important  antimi-
    18  crobial to a food-producing animal only for the purpose as determined by
    19  a  licensed veterinarian under this article.  The livestock producer may
    20  provide the antimicrobial only for the duration specified by the veteri-
    21  narian.
    22    § 6724. Annual reports. 1. Veterinarians licensed to practice  in  New
    23  York state, or who are licensed in a bordering state and practice in the
    24  state,  and  who prescribe medically important antimicrobials or write a
    25  Veterinary Feed Directive for one or more sets of food-producing animals
    26  must file an annual report under this  section  in  a  form  and  manner
    27  required by the department by rule. This report will be submitted to the
    28  commissioner,  the  commissioner of health, the commissioner of agricul-
    29  ture and markets, the temporary president  of  the  senate,  the  senate
    30  minority leader, the speaker of the assembly, and the minority leader of
    31  the  assembly. If any medically important antimicrobials were prescribed
    32  to, provided to, or administered to food-producing  animals  during  the
    33  reporting  period, the annual report must contain the following informa-
    34  tion:
    35    (a) The total number of food-producing animals provided with medically
    36  important antimicrobials;
    37    (b) The name of each medically important antimicrobial provided;
    38    (c) The species of food-producing animals that were provided with each
    39  medically important antimicrobial;
    40    (d) The quantity of each medically important antimicrobial  prescribed
    41  to each species of food-producing animal;
    42    (e) The number of days that each medically important antimicrobial was
    43  intended to be provided to a food-producing animal;
    44    (f)  The  dosage  of  each  medically important antimicrobial that was
    45  intended to be provided to a food-producing animal;
    46    (g) The method for providing each medically important antimicrobial to
    47  a food-producing animal;
    48    (h) The purpose for providing each medically  important  antimicrobial
    49  to a food-producing animal; and
    50    (i)  The  disease  or  infection,  if  any,  that  was  intended to be
    51  controlled due to the provision of each medically important antimicrobi-
    52  al.
    53    2. For the purposes of  paragraph  (h)  of  subdivision  one  of  this
    54  section,  the  purpose for providing a medically important antimicrobial
    55  to a food-producing animal must be reported as:
    56    (a) Disease control; or

        S. 2871--A                          5
 
     1    (b) Disease treatment; or
     2    (c) Necessary for surgical or other medical procedures.
     3    3.  Information  reported  under  this section should be made publicly
     4  available by the department of health annually in an  online  searchable
     5  database  of  aggregated data.  Such database shall protect the identity
     6  of a licensed veterinarian, an individual farm or business.
     7    4. Information reported under this section is a public record  and  is
     8  not  subject  to  exemption from public disclosure as required under the
     9  New York state freedom of information law.
    10    5. The state board of veterinary medicine, the  department  of  health
    11  and  the department of agriculture and markets will consult as necessary
    12  to fulfill the requirements of this section.
    13    § 6725. Antimicrobial stewardship guidelines. 1. The  state  board  of
    14  veterinary  medicine, in consultation with the department of agriculture
    15  and markets, the department of  health,  universities,  and  cooperative
    16  extensions,  shall develop antimicrobial stewardship guidelines and best
    17  management practices for  veterinarians,  livestock  owners,  and  their
    18  employees who are involved with the administering of medically important
    19  antimicrobials  on  the proper use of medically important antimicrobials
    20  for disease treatment and control. The guidelines shall  include  scien-
    21  tifically  validated  practical  alternatives  to  the  use of medically
    22  important antimicrobials, including, but not limited  to,  good  hygiene
    23  and  management  practices. The guidelines shall be reviewed and updated
    24  periodically, as necessary.
    25    2. The state board of veterinary medicine shall consult with livestock
    26  producers, licensed veterinarians, and other  relevant  stakeholders  on
    27  ensuring  that  livestock  grown  in  rural areas with limited access to
    28  veterinary care have timely access to treatment.
    29    3. For the purposes of this section, "antimicrobial stewardship" is  a
    30  commitment to do all of the following:
    31    (a) To use medically important microbials only when necessary to treat
    32  or control disease;
    33    (b)  To  select  the appropriate medically important microbial and the
    34  appropriate dose, duration, and route of administration; and
    35    (c) To use medically important microbials for  the  shortest  duration
    36  necessary  and  allowable,  and to administer them to the fewest animals
    37  necessary.
    38    § 6726. Implementation. 1. The state board of veterinary medicine, the
    39  department of health, and the  department  of  agriculture  and  markets
    40  shall  coordinate  with the United States Department of Agriculture, the
    41  United States Food and Drug Administration, and the Centers for  Disease
    42  Control  and  Prevention to implement the expanded antimicrobial resist-
    43  ance surveillance efforts included  in  the  National  Action  Plan  for
    44  Combating  Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria, and that the information gath-
    45  ered through this effort will help lead to a better understanding of the
    46  links between antimicrobial use patterns in livestock and  the  develop-
    47  ment of antimicrobial-resistant bacterial infections.
    48    2.  (a)  The department of health, the state board of veterinary medi-
    49  cine, the department of  agriculture  and  markets,  veterinarians,  and
    50  livestock  producers  shall  gather  information  on medically important
    51  antimicrobial sales and usage as well as antimicrobial-resistant  bacte-
    52  ria  and  livestock  management practice data.  Monitoring efforts shall
    53  not be duplicative of the National Animal Health  Monitoring  System  or
    54  the  National  Antimicrobial  Resistance  Monitoring System, and, to the
    55  extent feasible, will coordinate with the United  States  Department  of
    56  Agriculture,  the  Centers  for  Disease Control and Prevention, and the

        S. 2871--A                          6

     1  United States Food and Drug Administration in the development  of  these
     2  efforts.
     3    (b)  In coordinating with the National Animal Health Monitoring System
     4  and the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System, the depart-
     5  ment of health, the state board of veterinary medicine and  the  depart-
     6  ment  of  agriculture and markets shall gather representative samples of
     7  biological isolates from all of the following:
     8    (i) New York state's major livestock segments;
     9    (ii) regions with considerable livestock production; and
    10    (iii) representative segments of the food production chain.
    11    (c) The department of health, the state board of  veterinary  medicine
    12  and the department of agriculture and markets shall report to the legis-
    13  lature  by January first, two thousand twenty-four, the results of their
    14  outreach activities and monitoring efforts.
    15    § 6727. Authority to receive Veterinary Feed Directives.  The  depart-
    16  ment of agriculture and markets has the authority to request and receive
    17  copies of all Veterinary Feed Directives issued in the state from veter-
    18  inarians,  livestock owners, feed mills, or distributors to fully imple-
    19  ment the provisions of this article.
    20    § 6728. Violations. 1. A person or entity who  violates  this  article
    21  shall  be  liable  for  a civil penalty of not more than two hundred and
    22  fifty dollars per farm operation for each day a violation occurs.
    23    2. (a) For a second or subsequent violation, a person  or  entity  who
    24  violates  this  article shall be punishable by an administrative fine in
    25  the amount of five hundred dollars per farm operation  for  each  day  a
    26  violation occurs.
    27    (b)  In addition to the administrative fine, the violator shall attend
    28  an educational program to be jointly  developed  by  the  department  of
    29  health  and  the state board of veterinary medicine on the judicious use
    30  of medically important antimicrobials. The violator  shall  successfully
    31  complete  the  program and provide proof to the board within ninety days
    32  from the occurrence of the violation.
    33    3. Subdivisions one and  two  of  this  section  shall  not  apply  to
    34  licensed  veterinarians.  A  veterinarian  who  violates this section is
    35  subject to discipline as defined in  subarticle  three  of  article  one
    36  hundred thirty of title eight of this chapter.
    37    4.  The  moneys  collected pursuant to this article shall be deposited
    38  into the antibiotics education  fund  established  pursuant  to  section
    39  ninety-seven-j of the state finance law and be available for expenditure
    40  upon appropriation by the legislature.
    41    §  3. The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 97-j to
    42  read as follows:
    43    § 97-j. Antibiotics education fund. 1. There is hereby established  in
    44  the  custody  of the state comptroller a special fund to be known as the
    45  "antibiotics education fund".
    46    2. Such fund shall consist of all monies recovered from the assessment
    47  of any penalty authorized by article one hundred  thirty-five-A  of  the
    48  education law.
    49    3. Moneys of the fund shall be deposited to the credit of the fund and
    50  shall,  in addition to any other moneys made available for such purpose,
    51  be available to the department for the  purpose  of  antibiotics  educa-
    52  tional  programs. All payments from the antibiotics education fund shall
    53  be made on the audit and warrant of the state  comptroller  on  vouchers
    54  certified and submitted by the commissioner.
    55    § 4. This act shall take effect January 1, 2023.
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