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Misty L. Trepke

http://www..com

 

 

 

McMedicine

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

June 25, 2003

 

You may have heard the news last week that McDonald's Corporation has

told its meat suppliers to discontinue the use of antibiotics in

animals.

 

On the surface, this new policy sounds like good news - especially

given the fact that McDonald's is one of the largest meat purchasers

in the U.S. And while I'm very happy to see McDonald's taking a step

in the right direction, when you examine the details, this directive

doesn't have very sharp teeth.

 

Which is too bad, because what we need right now is genuinely

persuasive action on the part of major meat buyers like McDonald's.

 

No guarantees

 

Let's start by getting the glaring weaknesses out of the way.

 

First of all, this new policy won't even be in effect until 2005.

Okay - better late than never - but the policy only applies to

McDonald's direct suppliers. Indirect suppliers will be " encouraged "

to follow the new guidelines. And guess what those indirect suppliers

provide? All of McDonald's beef and pork. (Direct suppliers provide

about 70 percent of the poultry McDonald's buys.)

 

Apparently incentives will be offered to help encourage indirect

suppliers to comply with the policy, but just how effective these

incentives and encouragement might turn out to be is anybody's guess.

In other words, let's not jump to the conclusion that McDonald's meat

is going to be anything close to antibiotic-free.

 

A non-profit organization called Environmental Defense was

instrumental in coaxing McDonald's to establish the new antibiotic

policy and hopefully that association will extend to help implement

the plan when it goes into effect. But if McDonald's is fidyl lax in

enforcing this new policy, and if other restaurant and grocery chains

don't step up and demand meat from animals that have not been loaded

with antibiotics, the repercussions in human resistance to

antibiotics could create major health problems in years to come.

 

Worst-case scenarios

 

As I told you in the e-Alert " Got Antibiotics? " (5/8/02), besides

being used to treat sick animals, antibiotics are routinely used to

make livestock and poultry grow faster and larger. This has led to an

overuse of antibiotics in farm animals that may play a significant

role in the development of human antibiotic resistance. And if that

doesn't sound scary enough, consider this: approximately 80 percent

of the total antibiotic production in the U.S. is used in

agriculture.

 

And it gets even scarier. Because a study out of the University of

Maryland last year supported the theory that agricultural antibiotic

use may be introducing new antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria

into the human population - while at the same time making antibiotics

less effective in fighting disease.

 

The study evaluated the medical impact of simultaneously using the

same antibiotics in livestock animals as is used in medicine for

humans. With mathematical models, the scientists calculated the

average human's every day exposure to animal bacteria, along with

bacteria's rate of transmission. Their conclusion: by the time an

antibiotic-resistant bacteria infection could be detected in humans,

its course would be irreversible.

 

Sources in your neighborhood

 

McDonald's new policy will provide at least some benefit for

McDonald's customers, but what if you never step foot in McDonald's -

are there steps you can take to insure that the chicken, beef, and

pork you eat don't come with a side order of antibiotics? There are.

But to get started, a little research will be in order.

 

The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy provides an exhaustive

online list of grocery retailers and restaurants in the U.S. that do

not use or sell meat that's been treated with antibiotics. By

searching for entries in your state you can also find local meat

producers that forego antibiotics.

(See " IATP's Guide for Meat Raised Without Antibiotics " at:

iatp.org.)

 

When searching this list you'll find many individual restaurants, but

among them, a few national chains stand out: Chipotle doesn't serve

pork raised with antibiotics, and T.G.I. Fridays hasn't served

antibiotic beef since 2001. There's another chain on the east coast

that isn't quite as common to the landscape as those two but it's

cropping up in more places: Chicken Out serves only hormone- and

antibiotic-free chicken and turkey.

 

So while McDonald's is not exactly the leader its press release makes

it out to be, the new policy might at least prompt other restaurants,

fast food chains, and grocery stores to follow suit.

 

If nothing else, the attention this announcement received in the

mainstream media will help make the public more aware that antibiotic

resistance in humans is a serious problem, ticking away like a time

bomb. Hopefully it will be diffused by the responsible actions of

meat producers and consumers before it's too late.

 

 

Sources:

 

" McDonald's: Reduce Antibiotics in Animals " Dave Carpenter,

Associated Press, 6/19/03, ap.org

 

" McDonald's Calls for Phase-Out of Growth Promoting

Antibiotics in Meat Supply, Establishes Global Policy on

Antibiotic Use " McDonald's Corporate Press Release, 6/19/03,

mcdonalds.com

 

" McDonald's Says No More Playing Chicken with Antibiotics "

Environmental Defense, press release, 6/17/03

" Eat Well, Eat Antibiotic-Free " Institute for Agriculture and

Trade Policy, iatp.org

" Antibiotic-Free Meats Are New Health Trend in Food Service "

Keep Antibiotics Working, press release, 11/13/01,

keepantibioticsworking.com

 

To learn more about HSI, call (203) 699-4416 or visit

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/HSI/WHSIC313/home.cfm

 

 

 

 

 

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