Source: Natural Cures For?
Source: abcnews
Chicken superbugs responsible for drug-resistant bladder infections in 8 million women
A growing number of medical researchers say more
than 8 million women are at risk of difficult-to-treat bladder infections
because superbugs – resistant to antibiotics and growing in chickens – are being
transmitted to humans in the form of E. coli.
“We’re finding the same or related E. coli in human infections and in retail
meat sources, specifically chicken,” said Amee Manges, epidemiologist at McGill
University in Montreal.
If the medical researchers are right, this is compelling new evidence of a
direct link between the pervasive, difficult-to-cure human disease and the
antibiotic-fed chicken people buy at the grocery store.
“What this new research shows is, we may in fact know where it’s coming from.
It may be coming from antibiotics used in agriculture,” said Maryn McKenna,
reporter for the Food & Environment Reporting
Network, working on a joint investigation with ABC News.
The Food and Drug Administration says 80 percent of all antibiotics sold in
the United States are fed to livestock and even healthy chicken to protect them
from disease in cramped quarters. It also helps the chickens grow bigger and
faster.
“We’re particularly interested in chickens. They, in many cases, are getting
drugs from the time that they were in an egg all the way up to the time they are
slaughtered,” Manges said.
The chicken
industry disputes the researchers’ conclusions, and quoted Dr. Randall
Singer, associate professor epidemiology at the University of Minnesota’s
Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, who said: “These studies have
nothing to do with antibiotics in poultry product and further changes to
antibiotic use in poultry will not change the potential human health risks
associated with these foodborne E.coli.”
Researchers acknowledge that there is no study showing a definitive link
between the E.coli in chicken and infection in women, but point out that a study
like that would be unethical because it would require intentionally exposing
women to the bacteria.
They say that there is persuasive evidence that chicken carries the same
bacteria with the highest levels of resistance to medicine as causes the drug
resistant infection in women.
See the National Chicken Council’s full
statement on the ABC News report.
Adrienne LaBeouf, 29, is among the women suffering from a constant
infection.
“It feels like I have some kind of infection that just won’t go away,” she
said.
LaBeouf of Washington, D.C., has visited her doctor about her persistent
bladder infection. “It was cured for a little while,” she added, “and then it
comes back with a vengeance.”
ABC News’ Brian Hartman contributed to this report.
Source link:
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2012/07/11/superbug-dangers-in-chicken-linked-to-8-million-at-risk-women/
Source link:
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2012/07/11/superbug-dangers-in-chicken-linked-to-8-million-at-risk-women/
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