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http://news./s/ap/20081125/ap_on_he_me/med_chicken_bacteria;_ylt=Atyxel\

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Germ alert: Steer clear of flatbed chicken trucks

 

By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe, Ap Medical Writer --

Tue Nov 25, 5:30 pm ET

 

ATLANTA -- You've heard about the chicken that crossed the road. But

have you heard the one about the chickens traveling down the road? It's

no laughing matter. Crates of chickens being trucked along the highway

in the back of an open truck can shoot a bunch of nasty bacteria into

the cars behind them, researchers have found.

 

Drivers stuck behind such a truck should " pass them quickly, " advised

study co-author Ana Rule, a researcher at Johns Hopkins University.

 

Even so, it's not clear that germy debris will make you sick. None of

the scientists who studied this problem got sick. And the

disease-causing bacteria in question are normally spread by food or

water, not air.

 

Rule and her colleagues at the Bloomberg School of Public Health focused

on the so-called Delmarva Peninsula, a coastal area that includes parts

of Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. The region is a chicken mecca, with

one of the highest concentrations of broiler chickens per acre in the

nation.

 

The researchers chose a 17-mile stretch of highway connecting chicken

farms in Maryland to a processing plant to the south in Accomac, Va.

They rode in four-door cars with all the windows down and the air

conditioning off.

 

They checked the cars for bacteria after driving when there were no

chicken trucks around. And they checked for bacteria after 10 trips

behind flatbed trucks carrying crates of broiler chickens.

 

They collected bacteria from air samples, door handles and soda cans

inside the car.

 

In all the truck chases, they found high levels of certain bacteria,

including some that are resistant to antibiotics.

 

The study, released this week, is being published in the first issue of

the Journal of Infection and Public Health, and it's billed as the first

to look at whether poultry trucking exposes people to

antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

 

It was a casual conversation that inspired the effort.

 

" Somebody said, 'I went to the beach the other day and I got stuck

behind a chicken truck, and boy, is that nasty,' " Rule said.

 

She said studies to determine if chicken trucks can make you sick are

somewhere down the road.

 

Dr. Keith Klugman, an Emory University epidemiologist who was not

involved in the research, said getting sick that way is unlikely. Most

healthy people don't suffer serious illness from these bacteria even

when exposed in more conventional ways.

 

" It was kind of an unnatural experiment, in that people were driving

behind these trucks with the windows open and the air conditioning off

--- for 17 miles, " he added. " If you were driving behind a truck that

was spewing stuff out the back of it, the first thing you would probably

do is close your windows. "

 

__

 

On the Net:

 

Journal of Infection and Public Health:

http://www.elsevier.com/locate/jiph

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30016990/SIG=115o8sdru;_ylt=AlcIgtwRXGbN.XFMnsKNRata24cA/*http://www.elsevier.co\

m/locate/jiph>

 

 

 

 

 

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