Bad Month for US Chicken
Bad Month for US Chicken
by Martha Rosenberg
October 22,
2013
Could there be anything worse for the US chicken industry than this month's outbreak of an antibiotic-resistant strain of salmonella that hospitalized 42 percent of everyone who got it--almost 300 in 18 states-? Yes. The government also announced that China has been cleared to process chickens for the US dinner plate and that all but one of arsenic compounds no one knew they were eating anyway have been removed from US poultry production. Thanks for that. Also this month, some food researchers have revealed the true recipe for chicken "nuggets" …just in time for Halloween.
Extreme Salmonella
Do you remember
the joke "denial is not a river in Egypt"? Well "Heidelberg"
is not a charismatic city in Germany when you're talking
about food. It is a monster version of salmonella, some
strains of which are resistant to seven antibiotics says Christopher
Braden, director of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention division of foodborne diseases. Thirteen
percent of people affected by the current outbreak have
salmonella septicemia, a serious, life-threatening,
whole-body inflammation, says Braden. The contamination
stems from "fecal material on carcasses, poor
sanitary dressing practices, insanitary food contact
surfaces, insanitary nonfood contact surfaces, and direct
product contamination," says the USDA. That about covers it.
The California-based Foster Farms, believed to be the source
of the outbreak, has had salmonella problems for a decade
says Food Poisoning News. Nor has the
government shut them down, even now.
Salmonella is a "naturally occurring bacteria" says the USDA and hence allowed in food--but we are supposed to cook chicken and other products to at least 165°F to kill it and other microbial freeloaders. But Caroline Smith DeWaal of the Center for Science in the Public Interest disagrees with the government's leniency. Salmonella strains like Heidelberg “are too hot for consumers to handle in their kitchens,” she told USA Today.
E. Coli
Just
because chicken has salmonella doesn't mean it doesn't also
have E. coli! Eighty-seven percent of chicken cadavers test
positive for E. coli before they are sent to stores reports
Salon. E.coli is considered more dangerous than salmonella by the
USDA and was one of the reasons Russia banned 19 US poultry producers in 2008
(along with US arsenic residues.) Antibiotic-resistant E.
coli traces were found in samples of raw
conventional chicken, chickens "raised without antibiotics"
and kosher chicken purchased in New York City in April. The
highest E. coli incidence was, surprisingly, found in the
kosher chicken. Last year, researchers writing in Emerging Infectious
Diseases reported that E. coli in chicken is
genetically closer to human E. coli than E. coli in
beef and pork samples and could put people at risk for
urinary tract infections when they are exposed to it because
of its similarity.
Arsenic
"What Was Arsenic
Doing in Our Chicken, Anyway?" asks a Bloomberg article after the FDA
reported the end of all but one poultry arsenic product this
month, four years after the Center for Food Safety filed a
petition. The agency announced that the Center's
petition to have the approvals of arsenic-containing poultry
feed revoked had become "moot" after the "sponsors of those
drugs requested that FDA withdraw the approvals for those
products." One of the four compounds, nitarsone, is still on
the market while the FDA reviews its safety.
Why are birds fed arsenic? It has been approved in poultry feed for years to control parasites, promote weight gain and improve feed efficiency and "pigmentation." A 2013 study in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives found detectable levels of arsenic in chicken from grocery stores in 10 American cities, including organic chickens. If the drug were fed to all chickens, over 100 US deaths would result from arsenic-related lung and bladder cancers, wrote the authors. Nor is arsenic the only unwanted chemical guest. Looking at feathers of factory farmed birds, researchers have also found evidence of caffeine and the active ingredients in Tylenol, Benadryl, Prozac reports the New York Times Nick Kristof. The caffeine is supposed to keep chickens awake so they eat more, while the Benadryl, Tylenol and Prozac are supposed to reduce their anxiety so their meat doesn't get tough says Kristof.
Antibiotics
Where do
antibiotic-resistant salmonella and E.coli in chicken come
from? Is that a trick question? More than 70 percent of US antibiotics go to livestock --more
than 29 million pounds of antibiotics a
year--which of course creates antibiotic resistance. The
antibiotic resistant pathogens aren't just a risk to
food--they're a risk to farm workers. Dr. Ellen Silbergeld,
Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at Johns Hopkins'
Bloomberg School of Public Health, found 63 percent of the chicken workers at one
plant had been colonized by Campylobacter jejuni, a germ
that is the second leading cause of gastrointestinal disease
in the US. One hundred percent of people living near the
plant but not working there who were tested had
Campylobacter jejuni too.
In 2008, the USDA caught chicken giant Tyson Foods claiming "no antibiotics" in its ads and labels but brazenly using the human antibiotic gentamicin as "standard practice" in its chickens. Tyson has been charged with other scourges affecting Big Chicken too such as cruelty to animals, paying smugglers to transport illegal workers, and violating the Clean Water Act. It was investigated for bribing veterinarians in Mexico but never charged.
Chicken Yuckets
No one has ever
thought chicken nuggets were actually good for you.
Last year, the Daily Mail reported a girl who lived
on only McDonald's Chicken McNuggets collapsed and was
diagnosed with anemia and inflamed veins on her tongue. (Who
remembers the movie Super Size Me?) But now, some
researchers writing in the American Journal of
Medicine have revealed some new facts about the mystery
meat just in time for Halloween. Some nuggets that were
examined were a mix of fat, blood vessels and nerves
including cells that line the skin and internal organs.
Other nuggets were mostly fat, cartilage and bone
with only 40 percent muscle meat. A few years ago, CNN revealed that US Chicken McNuggets
contain an anti-foaming agent called dimethylpolysiloxane
found in Silly Putty and the petroleum-based preservative
tBHQ also called tertiary butylhydroquinone. After the
American Journal of Medicine article Mother Jones' Tom Philpott asked
Tyson about the wholesomeness of its Fun Nuggets and they
referred him to the National Chicken Council which said,
"Chicken nuggets are an excellent source of protein,
especially for kids who might be picky
eaters."
Chicken From China
Put the
words "food" and "China" together and many people think of
the 1,950 cats and 2,200 dogs who perished from China-produced pet food a
few years ago and the Asian melamine milk scandals that plague Asian
countries. Still the takeover of Smithfield Foods by Shuanghui, the
biggest takeover of a US company, shows our food future is
being shaped by China--and chicken is no exception. Many
missed the announcement that the Obama administration has approved chicken processed in China to
be sold in the US without a country-of-origin label. The
chickens will be raised and slaughtered in USDA-approved US
or Canada operations, but sent to China for processing
(which is called "labor-intensive") and sent back to the US.
The savings in farming out the labor, no pun intended, is
apparently greater than the cost of shipping the chickens
both to and from China--though no one is talking about
the carbon footprint. Nor is anyone talking about how the
chickens will be preserved during their overseas voyages and
how old they will be when they get to the dinner table.
No USDA officials will be onsite at the Chinese chicken processing plants which will, instead, "self-verify" their quality as plants are increasingly doing here. The National Chicken Council says the processed chicken will have "increased inspection upon entry into the United States” and that substandard exporters will be disqualified. Whew.
Cruelty to
Animals
Chemicals, cost cutting and outsourcing labor
take a toll on the birds whose lives and deaths are
increasingly inhumane. Chickens were once slaughtered at 14
weeks when they weighed about two pounds but by 2001, they
were being slaughtered at seven weeks when they weighed
between four and six pounds Today they are even
bigger and their lives shorter. In fact, chickens are now
grown so quickly, if humans grew as fast, we’d weigh 349 pounds by our second
birthday! As a result, chickens have constant bone disease,
live in chronic pain and perish from eerie, factory-farm
related diseases. "Good birds on their sides or breasts,
scattered in a random fashion in the pen also usually are
considered to be dead from flip-over," says Poultry News. "Diagnosis is supported by
the full GI tract (particularly the full intestine); the
large, pale liver; the large, normal bursa; the contracted
ventricles and dilated, blood-filled atria; the lung
congestion and edema; and the lack of pathological
lesions."
Assembly lines move so fast in today's chicken slaughterhouses, poultry workers, the government and even the chicken industry admit that the birds break their own bones in struggling to escape the uncaring death that the pursuit of cheap meat forces on them.
Many people have decided to only eat chicken to avoid the health, environmental, worker and humane questions surrounding red meat. Yet the track record of US chicken in these areas is no better than red meat--and may be worse.
Support investigative health journalism! Give Martha Rosenberg's award-winning expose, Born with a Junk Food Deficiency for the holidays.