SB 27, as amended, Hill. Livestock: use of antimicrobial drugs.
Existing
end deletebegin insert(1)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertExistingend insert law regulates the distribution and use of livestock drugs, as defined, by the Secretary of Food and Agriculture. Existing law also requires a person to obtain a license from the secretary to manufacture, sell, distribute, or store commercial feed, including commercial feed containing drugs.
This bill would, beginning January 1,begin delete 2017,end deletebegin insert
2018,end insert prohibit the administration of medically important antimicrobial drugs, as defined, to livestock unless ordered by a veterinarian through a prescription or veterinary feed directive pursuant to a veterinarian-client-patient relationship, as specified, and would prohibit the administration of a medically important antimicrobial drug to livestock solely to cause an increased rate of weight gain or improved feed efficiency.begin delete The bill, subject to the availability of funding for this purpose, would require the
Department of Food and Agriculture to develop a program or participate in an initiative to track the use of medically important antimicrobial drugs in livestock and to track antimicrobial-resistant bacteria and patterns of emerging resistance. The bill would also require the department to adopt regulations to promote the judicious use of medically important antimicrobial drugs in livestock, as specified.end deletebegin insert The bill would require the Department of Food and Agriculture, in consultation with the Veterinary Medical Board and the State Department of Public Health, to implement programs to promote antimicrobial stewardship in livestock, and, in coordination with specified national entities, would require the department to develop a monitoring program to gather information on sales, usage, resistance, and management practice data for medically important antimicrobial drugs. The bill would require information provided pursuant to
those provisions to be held confidential, as specified. The bill would make a first violation of the bill’s provisions subject to a civil penalty of $250 for each day a violation occurs, and would make second and subsequent violations subject to an administrative fine of $500 for each day a violation occurs.end insert
(2) The Veterinary Medicine Practice Act provides for the licensure and regulation of veterinarians and the practice of veterinary medicine by the Veterinary Medical Board, and requires an applicant for a renewal license to complete 36 hours of continuing education in the preceding 2 years.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would require a veterinarian who receives a licence to practice veterinary medicine on or after January 1, 2018, to complete an approved course on the judicious use of medically important antimicrobial drugs every 4 years as part of the continuing education requirement.
end insertbegin insert(3) Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would make legislative findings to that effect.
end insertBecause
end delete
begin insert(4)end insertbegin insert end insertbegin insertBecauseend insert a violation of thebegin delete bill’s provisionsend deletebegin insert provisions of the Veterinary Medicine Practice Actend insert would bebegin insert aend insert misdemeanor, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
begin insertSection 4846.5 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
2Codeend insertbegin insert is amended to read:end insert
(a) Except as provided in this section, the board shall
4issue renewal licenses only to those applicants that have completed
5a minimum of 36 hours of continuing education in the preceding
6two years.
7(b) (1) Notwithstanding any otherbegin delete provision ofend delete law, continuing
8education hours shall be earned by attending courses relevant to
9veterinary medicine and sponsored or cosponsored by any of the
10following:
11(A) American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)
12accredited veterinary medical colleges.
13(B) Accredited colleges or universities offering
programs
14relevant to veterinary medicine.
15(C) The American Veterinary Medical Association.
16(D) American Veterinary Medical Association recognized
17specialty or affiliated allied groups.
18(E) American Veterinary Medical Association’s affiliated state
19veterinary medical associations.
20(F) Nonprofit annual conferences established in conjunction
21with state veterinary medical associations.
22(G) Educational organizations affiliated with the American
23Veterinary Medical Association or its state affiliated veterinary
24medical associations.
25(H) Local veterinary medical associations affiliated with the
26California Veterinary Medical
Association.
27(I) Federal, state, or local government agencies.
28(J) Providers accredited by the Accreditation Council for
29Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) or approved by the
30American Medical Association (AMA), providers recognized by
31the American Dental Association Continuing Education
32Recognition Program (ADA CERP), and AMA or ADA affiliated
33state, local, and specialty organizations.
34(2) Continuing education credits shall be granted to those
35veterinarians taking self-study courses, which may include, but
P4 1are not limited to, reading journals, viewing video recordings, or
2listening to audio recordings. The taking of these courses shall be
3limited to no more than six hours biennially.
4(3) The board may approve other continuing veterinary medical
5
education providers not specified in paragraph (1).
6(A) The board has the authority to recognize national continuing
7education approval bodies for the purpose of approving continuing
8education providers not specified in paragraph (1).
9(B) Applicants seeking continuing education provider approval
10shall have the option of applying to the board or to a
11board-recognized national approval body.
12(4) For good cause, the board may adopt an order specifying,
13on a prospective basis, that a provider of continuing veterinary
14medical education authorized pursuant to paragraph (1) or (3) is
15no longer an acceptable provider.
16(5) Continuing education hours earned by attending courses
17sponsored or cosponsored by those entities listed in paragraph (1)
18between January 1,
2000, and January 1, 2001, shall be credited
19toward a veterinarian’s continuing education requirement under
20this section.
21(c) Every person renewing his or her license issued pursuant to
22Sectionbegin delete 4846.4end deletebegin insert 4846.4,end insert or any person applying for relicensure or
23for reinstatement of his or her license to active status, shall submit
24proof of compliance with this section to the board certifying that
25he or she is in compliance with this section. Any false statement
26submitted pursuant to this section shall be a violation subject to
27Section 4831.
28(d) This section shall not apply to a veterinarian’s first license
29renewal. This section shall apply only to second and subsequent
30license renewals granted on or
after January 1, 2002.
31(e) The board shall have the right to audit the records of all
32applicants to verify the completion of the continuing education
33requirement. Applicants shall maintain records of completion of
34required continuing education coursework for a period of four
35years and shall make these records available to the board for
36auditing purposes upon request. If the board, during this audit,
37questions whether any course reported by the veterinarian satisfies
38the continuing education requirement, the veterinarian shall provide
39information to the board concerning the content of the course; the
P5 1name of its sponsor and cosponsor, if any; and specify the specific
2curricula that was of benefit to the veterinarian.
3(f) A veterinarian desiring an inactive license or to restore an
4inactive license under Section 701 shall submit an application on
5a form provided by the board. In
order to restore an inactive license
6to active status, the veterinarian shall have completed a minimum
7of 36 hours of continuing education within the last two years
8preceding application. The inactive license status of a veterinarian
9shall not deprive the board of its authority to institute or continue
10a disciplinary action against a licensee.
11(g) Knowing misrepresentation of compliance with this article
12by a veterinarian constitutes unprofessional conduct and grounds
13for disciplinary action or for the issuance of a citation and the
14imposition of a civil penalty pursuant to Section 4883.
15(h) The board, in its discretion, may exempt from the continuing
16education requirement any veterinarian who for reasons of health,
17military service, or undue hardship cannot meet those requirements.
18Applications for waivers shall be submitted on a form provided
19by the board.
20(i) The administration of this section may be funded through
21professional license and continuing education provider fees. The
22fees related to the administration of this section shall not exceed
23the costs of administering the corresponding provisions of this
24section.
25(j) For those continuing education providers not listed in
26paragraph (1) of subdivision (b), the board or its recognized
27national approval agent shall establish criteria by which a provider
28of continuing education shall be approved. The board shall initially
29review and approve these criteria and may review the criteria as
30needed. The board or its recognized agent shall monitor, maintain,
31and manage related records and data. The board may impose an
32application fee, not to exceed two hundred dollars ($200)
33biennially, for continuing education providers not listed in
34paragraph (1) of subdivision (b).
35(k) A veterinarian who receives his or her license to practice
36veterinary medicine on or after January 1, 2018, shall complete
37an approved course on the judicious use of medically important
38antimicrobial drugs, as defined in Section 14400 of the Food and
39Agricultural Code, every four years as part of his or her continuing
40education requirement.
Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 14400) is added
3to Division 7 of the Food and Agricultural Code, to read:
4
For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions
8apply:
9(a) “Medically important antimicrobial drug” means an
10antimicrobial drug listed in Appendix A of the federal Food and
11Drug Administration’s Guidance for Industry #152, including
12critically important, highly important, and important antimicrobial
13drugs, as that appendix may be amended.
14(b) “Livestock”begin delete has the same meaning as in Section 14205.end delete
15begin insert means all animals and poultry, including aquatic and amphibian
16species, that are raised, kept, or used for profit. Livestock does
17not
include those species that are usually kept as pets, such as
18dogs, cats, and pet birds.end insert
Beginning January 1,begin delete 2017,end deletebegin insert 2018,end insert a medically important
20antimicrobial drug shall not be administered to livestock unless
21ordered by a veterinarian through a prescription or veterinary feed
22directive, pursuant to a veterinarian-client-patient relationship that
23meets the requirements of Section 2032.1 of Title 16 of the
24California Code of Regulations.
(a) Beginning January 1,begin delete 2017,end deletebegin insert 2018,end insert a medically
26important antimicrobial drug may be used when, in the professional
27judgment of a licensed veterinarian, the medically important
28antimicrobial drug is necessary for any of the following:
29(1) To treatbegin delete or control the spread ofend delete a disease or infection.
30(2) To control the spread of a disease or infection.
end insert6 31(2)
end delete32begin insert(3)end insert In relation to surgery or a medical procedure.
33(3) To prevent the transmission of a particular disease or
34infection known to occur in a specific situation.
35(4) For prophylaxis to prevent the contraction of a particular
36disease or infection known or
suspected to occur in a specific
37situation if antimcrobial prophylaxis is considered by a licensed
38veterinarian to be effective to prevent that infection or disease.
P7 1(b) A person shall not administer a medically important
2antimicrobial drug to livestockbegin insert solelyend insert for purposes of promoting
3weight gain or improving feed efficiency.
4(c) Unless the administration is consistent with subdivision (a),
5a person shall not administer a medically important antimicrobial
6drug in a repeated or regular pattern.
If funds are made available for this purpose, the
8department shall develop a program or participate in an initiative
9to track the use of medically important antimicrobial drugs in
10livestock and to track antimicrobial-resistant
bacteria and patterns
11of emerging resistance.
(a) Notwithstanding Sections 14401 and 14402 of this
13code and Section 4051 of the Business and Professions Code,
14medically important antimicrobial drugs may be sold by retailers
15licensed pursuant to Article 5 (commencing with Section 14321)
16of Chapter 4 of Division 7 with proof of an order by a veterinarian.
17(b) The department may promulgate regulations to implement
18this section.
(a) Thebegin delete department shall adopt regulations to promote
20the judicious use of medically important antimicrobial drugs in
21livestock to ensure that each animal gets the maximum benefit
22from the drug and help preserve the lifesaving potential of the
23drugs in the future. The regulations shall include antimicrobial
24stewardship guidelines that include rules on the proper use of
25medically important antimicrobial drugs for
disease prevention.end delete
26begin insert department, in consultation with the Veterinary Medical Board
27and the State Department of Public Health, may implement
28programs, including, but not limited to, best management practices,
29to promote antimicrobial stewardship in livestock to ensure that
30each animal gets the intended benefit from the drug to help
31preserve the lifesaving potential of the drugs in the future. The
32programs shall include antimicrobial stewardship guidelines on
33the proper use of medically important antimicrobial drugs for
34disease treatment, control, and prevention, including, but not
35limited to, the introduction of effective vaccines and good hygiene
36and management practices.end insert
37(b) The department shall consult with livestock producers, food
38animal
veterinarians, and any other relevant stakeholders on
39ensuring livestock timely access to treatment for producers in rural
40areas with limited access to veterinary care.
5 P8 1(b)
end delete
2begin insert(c)end insert For purposes of this section, “antimicrobial stewardship” is
3a commitment to do all of the following:
4(1) To use medically important antimicrobial drugs only when
5necessary to treat, control, and, in some cases, prevent, disease.
6(2) Tobegin delete chooseend deletebegin insert
selectend insert the appropriate medically important
7antimicrobial drug, and to administer the drug correctly each time.
8(3) To use medically important antimicrobial drugs for the
9shortest duration necessary and administered to the fewest animals
10necessary.
11(d) The department, in consultation with the Veterinary Medical
12Board, shall sponsor projects or collaborate with universities,
13cooperative extension, and veterinary, livestock, and poultry trade
14associations to do the following:
15(1) Promote and develop appropriate training materials for
16veterinarians, as well as animal owners and their employees, to
17promulgate good stewardship
practices.
18(2) Disseminate scientifically validated practical alternatives
19that may reduce the reliance on medically important antimicrobial
20drugs while maintaining and promoting animal health.
(a) In coordination with the National Animal Health
22Monitoring System and the National Antimicrobial Resistance
23Monitoring System, the department shall develop a monitoring
24program that gathers information on sales, usage, resistance, and
25management practice data. The monitoring system shall be
26compatible with, and not duplicative of, the national monitoring
27system.
28(b) In order to carry out this section, the department may request
29copies of veterinary feed directives and prescriptions from the
30livestock owner, veterinarian, or distributor. Participation in this
31effort shall be done in a manner that does not breach
32veterinary-patient confidentiality laws.
33(c) The department shall
seek funds from federal, state, private,
34and other sources to implement this section.
(a) The department shall consider how best to gather
36representative samples from all of the following:
37(1) California’s major livestock segments.
38(2) Regions with considerable livestock production.
39(3) Representative segments of the food production chain.
P9 1(b) The department shall work with willing participants to gather
2samples and may consult with livestock producers, food animal
3veterinarians, and any other relevant stakeholders on the
4implementation of the monitoring system.
Notwithstanding the California Public Records Act
6(Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of
7Title 1 of the Government Code), any information provided
8pursuant to this chapter shall be held confidential, and shall not
9be disclosed to any person or governmental agency, other than
10the department or the Veterinary Medical Board, for the purposes
11of enforcing the Veterinary Medicine Practice Act (Chapter 11
12(commencing with Section 4800) of Division 2 of the Business and
13Professions Code), unless the data is aggregated to prevent the
14identification of an individual farm or business. Information may
15be shared with federal agencies so long as it is protected by the
16federal Confidential Information Protection and Statistical
17Efficiency Act of 2002 (Public Law 107-347).
(a) A person who violates this chapter shall be liable
19for a civil penalty of not more than two hundred and fifty dollars
20($250) for each day a violation occurs.
21(b) (1) For a second or subsequent violation, a person who
22violates this chapter shall be punishable by an administrative fine,
23levied by the secretary, in the amount of five hundred dollars
24($500) for each day a violation occurs.
25(2) In addition to the administrative fine, the violator shall
26attend an educational program on the judicious use of medically
27important antimicrobial drugs that has been approved by the
28secretary. The violator shall successfully complete the program
29and provide proof to
the secretary within 90 days from the
30occurrence of the violation.
31(c) In addition to the penalties set forth in this section, if the
32Veterinary Medical Board determines that a veterinarian has
33engaged in unprofessional conduct in violation of the Veterinary
34Medicine Practice Act (Chapter 11 (commencing with Section
354800) of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code), the
36veterinarian may be subject to disciplinary sanctions pursuant to
37the act.
38(d) The fees collected pursuant to this article shall be deposited
39into the Department of Food and Agriculture Fund and shall be
40available for expenditure upon appropriation by the Legislature.
The Legislature finds and declares that Section 2 of
2this act, which adds Section 14407 to the Food and Agricultural
3Code, imposes a limitation on the public’s right of access to the
4meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and
5agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the
6California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision,
7the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the
8interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting
9that interest:
10In order to ensure the confidentiality of
the information collected
11pursuant to this act and the integrity of that information for
12regulatory and enforcement purposes, it is necessary that this act
13take effect.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
16Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
17the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
18district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
19infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
20for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
21the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
22the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
23Constitution.
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