| Antibiotic
Resistant Bacteria Found in U.S. Poultry
By J.R. Pegg
WASHINGTON, DC, December 10, 2002 (ENS) - Three times more
antibiotics by weight are fed to poultry in the United States than
humans consume, and the poultry industry's use of antibiotics is a
health risk to American turkey and chicken eaters, according to two
independent studies released today.
The studies, one from Consumer Reports and another jointly
produced by the Sierra Club and the Institute for Agriculture and
Trade Policy (IATP), raise concerns that Americans are increasingly
likely to purchase chicken contaminated with strains of salmonella
or campylobacter bacteria that are resistant to one or more
antibiotics often used to treat people.
Poultry house (Photo by Rob Flynn courtesy ARS)
"It is no small problem that bacteria on meat are getting more
and more resistant to antibiotics," said Dr. David Wallinga, an IATP
scientist and co-author of the Sierra Club/ITAP study.
"Common, brand name poultry products routinely carry at least one
disease causing germ if not more, and these bacteria are often
resistant to one or more antibiotics. The resistance we found is for
many of the same medicines that doctors rely on for treating people
sick with infections," Dr. Wallinga said.
Salmonella and campylobacter bacteria can cause fever, diarrhea
and abdominal cramps. People who are infected with antibiotic
resistant bacteria are likely to be subjected to lengthier, more
serious illnesses.
Poultry industry representatives called the studies "unduly
alarming to consumers" and countered that antibiotic resistance is
more likely the result of over prescription by doctors.
In addition, U.S poultry has less bacteria now than ever before,
according to industry sources.
"The potential risk of antibiotic resistant pathogens
transferring from animals to humans via the food supply is growing
smaller all the time," according to a joint statement from several
poultry industry groups.
Microscopic fluorescent green Campylobacter cells on chicken
skin. (Photo by Anna Bates courtesy USDA
Agricultural
Research Service)
No one argues that salmonella and campylobacter bacteria pose a
health risk to consumers. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) estimates that together they account for some 3.3
million food borne infections and more than 650 deaths each year.
Some 1.1 million Americans, according to the CDC, are sickened
each year by undercooked chicken that harbor bacteria or by food
that raw chicken juices have touched.
Poultry producers are doing everything they can to produce
healthy animals, and concern over antibiotic resistant bacteria are
overblown, according to Richard Lobb, spokesman for the National
Chicken Council.
"There is always going to be some risk of unwanted bacteria,
whether it is chicken, beef or cantaloupes," Lobb said. "There is
one thing you can do to eliminate that risk and that is to prepare
and cook food properly."
The groups who reported the studies both called for increased
consumer vigilance in the handling and preparation of chicken.
Still, they believe the industry could do more to reduce the use of
antibiotics in raising poultry, especially antibiotics that are also
used to treat humans.
The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) estimates some 10.5
million pounds of antibiotics are fed to American poultry each year,
with some 21 percent virtually identical to the ones doctors use to
treat sick people. These include tetracyclines, erythromycin,
penicillin, bacitracin and virginiamycin.
By contrast, UCS estimates all human antibiotic use is some three
million pounds per year.
These two studies are some of the first to examine the presence
of antibiotic resistant bacteria in chicken. Consumer Reports
investigators found nearly half the 484 chickens they tested had
either salmonella or campylobacter bacteria.
Some 90 percent of the campylobacter bacteria and 34 percent of
the salmonella bacteria showed some resistance to one or more
antibiotics often used to treat people.
"The bacteria counts from our 1998 report to this have gone
down," said David Pittle, senior vice president of technology for
Consumers Union, which publishes Consumer Reports. "But this is the
first data point measuring the resistance to antibiotics, and it is
a very uncomfortable starting point."
"You need swallow just 15 to 20 salmonella bacteria or about 500
campylobacter bacteria to become ill," said Doug Podolsky, senior
editor of Consumer Reports.
The 484 whole broiler chickens used in the Consumer Reports study
were purchased in 25 cities across the United States.
Tests conducted by the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
(IATP) and Sierra Club found 95 percent of the 200 chickens tested
had campylobacter bacteria, with 62 percent of the campylobacter
resistant to one or more antibiotics.
The IATP/Sierra Club study was conducted on 200 fresh whole
chickens and 200 packages of ground turkey purchased from grocery
stores in Des Moines, Iowa and Minneapolis/St.Paul, Minnesota.
Salmonella bacteria were found in 18 percent of the whole chickens
and 45 percent of the ground turkey samples. Of the salmonella
bacteria found in ground turkey, 62 percent were resistant to one or
more antibiotics.
Campylobacter bacteria were found in only two percent of the
ground turkey. Both campylobacter and salmonella bacteria were found
in 23 percent of the chickens sampled.
The subtherapeutic use of antibiotics, which is the use for
purposes other than treating disease, is a primary concern found by
both studies. Antibiotics are given to poultry to quicken growth and
are also administered as preventive measures to fight possible
infection.
Turkeys (Photo by Scott Bauer courtesy ARS)
This use is most prevalent on factory farms that have come to
dominate the U.S. poultry industry. The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) defines factory broiler poultry farms as
those that contain at least 100,000 broiler chickens or 55,000
turkeys. These factory farms account for some 97 percent of U.S.
sales of boiler chickens.
"This sets the stage for the evolution of drug resistant microbes
that multiply around chicken coops," Podolsky said. "Bacteria that
survive drug treatment may eventually contaminate carcasses during
slaughtering and processing. If chicken isn't cooked thoroughly
enough, they could end up on your dinner plate and colonize your
intestines."
Consumers Union has called on the USDA to extend its food safety
program to test for campylobacter and has also suggested the ban of
subtherapeutic uses of medically important drugs in poultry and
other livestock, but the industry is not convinced this is such a
good idea.
"Banning the use of antibiotics for prevention and control, and
to improve intestinal health, is counterproductive to the objective
of maintaining flock health," Lobb said. "In Denmark, where low
level antibiotics have been banned, disease has increased and the
use of therapeutic medications has increased more than 90 percent,"
he said.
The industry's subtherapeutic use of all antibiotics is down some
30 percent since 1996, Lobb added, and further regulations would
jeopardize the economics of the industry.
Egg laying hens are packed into battery cages which are lined up
in rows in huge factory warehouses. (Photo courtesy Farm
Sanctuary)
Still, Pittle and others expect Congress to look at both
subtherapeutic use and at a possible phaseout of the industry's use
of antibiotics that are also used to treat people.
The American Medical Association supports the phaseout. Some pou
ltry manufacturers have already begun to change their ways,
according to Margaret Mellon, director of UCS' Food and Environment
Program.
"It doesn't take rocket science to create the healthy, non
stressful conditions that make it possible to avoid the use of
antibiotics," said Mellon. "The European Union has now banned use of
all antibiotics used as growth promoters, and some mainstream U.S.
poultry producers are pulling back from the use of medically
important antibiotics for subtherapeutic uses."
Four of the five largest producers have stopped use of any Cipro-like
antibiotics, and a host of fast food retailers, including
McDonald's, Popeye's and Wendy's, have publicly committed to
purchase poultry only produced without these Cipro-like antibiotics.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration estimates some 150,000
Americans in 1999 developed a Cipro-resistant campylobacter
infection from contaminated chicken.
"We don't need to use these enormous quantities of drugs to
produce affordable, safe meat," Mellon said. "All we need to do is
persuade our poultry producers to throw away their drug crutches and
move on to new, better managed systems that don't depend on the use
of excessive antibiotics."
The IATP/Sierra Club report can be found by clicking
here.
The Consumer Reports article and report can be found at:
www.consumerreports.org
What You Can Do to Protect Yourself, courtesy of Consumer
Reports:
- Make chicken one of the last items you buy before heading to
the checkout line.
- Pick chicken that is well wrapped and at the bottom of the
case, where the temperature should be coolest. Sell-by dates are
not a perfect indicator of freshness. We found a few spoiled
chickens with sell-by dates as far away as four to six days. If
you can find a chicken with a sell-by date seven or more days
away, buy it.
- Place chicken in a plastic bag like those in the produce
department, to keep its juices from leaking.
- If you'll be cooking the chicken within a couple of days,
store it at below 40' F. Otherwise, freeze it.
- Thaw frozen chicken in a refrigerator or microwave oven, never
on a counter. Leave it in its packaging and put it on a plate, so
juices can't drip.
- Separate raw chicken from other foods. Immediately after
preparation, use hot, soapy water and paper towels to wash and dry
your hands and anything you or raw chicken might have touched.
- Cook chicken thoroughly to kill harmful bacteria. Whole
chicken should be heated to 180 degrees F, breasts to 170 degrees.
Use a thermometer; chicken that is no longer pink can still harbor
bacteria.
- Don't return cooked meat to the plate that held it raw. And
don't use a sauce in which raw chicken has been marinating unless
it has been brought to a rolling boil for at least a minute.
- Refrigerate or freeze leftovers within two hours of cooking.
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