By Dr. Mercola
Historically, the European Union (EU) has taken a far
stricter, more cautious stance with regards to genetically
engineered (GE) crops and foods. Not only must GE foods be
labeled in the EU, but resistance to growing GE crops is high in
general.
As reported two years ago, an estimated 75 percent of
Germans oppose GE, and few politicians are in favor of
genetic technology. Over there, it's actually politically
risky to support GMOs.
This is something the chemical technology industry, through
the shrewd manipulation of the US government, has fought to
change for a number of years now.
Most recently, in mid-June, US Agriculture Secretary Tom
Vilsack called for the European Union (EU) to ease restrictions
on GE foods and feed crops in order to come to an agreeable
trans-Atlantic trade pact.
He also suggested1
that "Europe should reconsider requirements to label
genetically modified foods," and urged the EU to reconsider
its ban on chlorine-washed chicken and growth-hormone treated
beef as well.
None of that is likely to happen. According to a recent
report by Reuters,2
the "European Union has ruled out importing meat from
animals injected with hormones and said that it will not simply
open the door to GM [genetically modified] crops."
US Food Manufacturing—Science Based or Reckless?
According to Vilsack, in order for the US Congress to approve
the trans-Atlantic trade pact, the agreement needs to provide
"significant" new market openings for American farmers—most of
which, as we know, grow GE crops.
In his talk, Vilsack insisted that the EU and US should agree
to "let science drive food regulation." But whose science are we
really talking about here?
Clearly, Vilsack is choosing to turn a blind eye to the
mounting evidence suggesting that GE foods and animal feed tend
to promote chronic disease; not to mention the fact that
genetically modified organisms (GMO's) cannot be contained in
the field.
They transfer to other plants through horizontal gene
transfer. Moreover, science has also raised questions about the
safety of many other American food manufacturing processes—the
use of drugs in particular.
It's already been established that the overuse of antibiotics
in US livestock has led to the scourge of antibiotic-resistant
infections, for example, which now claims at least 23,000
American lives each year.3
Last year, using data collected by the federal agency called
NARMS (National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System), the
Environmental Working Group (EWG) found antibiotic-resistant
bacteria in:
- 81 percent of ground turkey
- 69 percent of pork chops
- 55 percent of ground beef
- 39 percent of raw chicken parts
So much for all the "science-based" processing practices that
are supposed to make the food safer, such as washing chicken in
chlorine... The fact of the matter is, American food processing
methods tend to promote rather than resolve the problem with
foodborne pathogens. And Europe recognizes this.
US Meat Production Is Rife with Pharmaceuticals of Questionable
Safety
As I recently reported, over the course of just one year,
nearly 10 percent of the American swine population (about 8
million animals in all) has been wiped out by a highly lethal
virus, the
Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus (PEDv), which has been—at
least in part—traced back to pig's blood used in piglet feed.4
This is just the latest example of the failing factory farm
model... Besides the routine practice of feeding animals with
foods outside their natural diet, the feeding model used in
confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) also involves the
mixing of animal parts (in this case blood) from a large number
of animals, which is then fed to large numbers of
animals.
The meat from all of these animals is then mixed together in
large processing plants, before ultimately being sold in grocery
stores across the nation. All this mixing and
cross-contamination allows for pathogens to contaminate huge
amounts of food products, and is the reason why a single food
contamination can affect people—and, as in this case,
animals—across multiple states.
Disease promulgation is in fact a fundamental problem
inherent of the American factory farm model. Overuse of
antibiotics in particular continuously promotes the mutation of
pathogens into ever more virulent strains.
In the case of PEDv, the virus has traditionally been a
relatively mild pathogen. Only recently did it suddenly
evolve into a far more aggressive version—with a mortality rate
of nearly 100 percent among affected animals!5
So what's the answer?
There's an old nursery rhyme about an old lady who swallows a
fly. She then swallows a spider to catch the fly, and continues
to swallow increasingly larger animals to catch the previously
ingested animal. Upon swallowing a horse, the song comes to its
inevitable conclusion: "She's dead, of course."
Like the old lady in the song, the American solution to many
of its health problems is to come up with strategies that,
inevitably, make matters progressively worse.
The US Department of Agriculture's (USDA) response to the
PEDv outbreak is to develop a vaccine against this now
hardier-through-antibiotic-overuse pathogen. (Harrisvaccines was
recently granted unconditional licensure of a PEDv vaccine.6,
7,
8)
This knee-jerk reaction to address one adverse drug effect
with more drugs is driving our food system into an ever-more
dangerous direction, and like the old lady who swallowed a fly,
the end result of following this flawed line of thinking should
be foreseeable...
CAFO's Can Afford to Alter Practices
A better strategy would be to follow the lead of Dutch
large-scale hog farms, where they've experimented with the
complete opposite approach. When, in 2009, Dutch farmers
discovered a drug-resistant strain of bacteria that posed a risk
to human health, the hog farmers cut their use of antibiotics by
56 percent over three years.9
The Netherlands is the largest meat exporter in Europe, so it
shows that meat production—even on a very large scale—can be
done without growth promoters such as antibiotics. In her
report, "The Abstinence Method,"10
Maryn McKenna discusses the Dutch strategy in more detail. The
fact of the matter is, it works: the health risks for both
animals and humans were lowered, as tests showed it reduced the
presence of antibiotic-resistant pathogens in the animals.
Moreover:
"'This was done without any big consequences in
efficiency, or financial returns,' marvels Jan Kluytmans, a
professor of microbiology who monitors antibiotic resistance
at Amphia Hospital in the university town of Breda in the
southern part of the Netherlands. 'I think it indicates they
were using too much,'" McKenna writes.11
"The Dutch government's new antibiotic system is
complex but straightforward. Because antibiotics can only be
obtained by prescription — not, as in the US, from a feed
mill or a farm-supply store — veterinarians are the
gatekeepers. In fact, farmers must register the name of the
veterinarian they work with, which prevents them from
shopping around.
All farm drug prescriptions become partof a national
database, and farms raising the same type of animal are
ranked against each other to gauge how well they are
doing... Antibiotics are also rated; to prescribe the drugs
most likely to stimulate serious resistance, a veterinarian
must demonstrate that a susceptibility test has been
performed and that no other drug will work."
However, with a reduction in antibiotics, farmers must become
more adept at natural disease prevention. They must pay
closer attention to diet, hygiene, and stress—three factors that
are made more difficult when you're raising very large numbers
of animals simultaneously. Still, Dutch farmers show that it can
be done.
The KEY is reverting back to older ways of doing things, and
adapting them to a larger scale. One farmer explains how he
keeps sows and their litters in loose pens a week longer than
standard practice. There, he places the feed on the floor rather
than having them eat through a trough. This makes them eat more
slowly, which reduces their stress. "Really, what we have
done is go back to old systems," he says.
US Uses Many Other Growth-Promoting Drugs Banned in Other
Countries
Antibiotics are not primarily used to combat disease in
animals. They're actually used in low doses to promote
growth. But they're certainly not the only growth promoters
used in American livestock. Other examples include Ractopamine
and Zilmax, both of which are shunned by many other nations for
their potential harms, both to animals and humans.
-
Ractopamine is a beta-agonist drug that increases
protein synthesis, thereby making the animal more muscular.
This reduces the fat content of the meat and increases the
profit per animal. Beta-agonist drugs, as a class, have been
used in US cattle production since 2003. The drug is
administered in the days leading up to slaughter, and as
much as 20 percent of it can remain in the meat you buy.
This is disconcerting when you consider that Ractopamine
drug label warns: "Not for use in humans," and "individuals
with cardiovascular disease should exercise special caution
to avoid exposure."
Ractopamine is banned from food production in at least
160 countries, including countries across Europe, Russia,
mainland China, and Taiwan, due to its suspected health
effects. In an effort to get this dangerous additive out of
American meat products, the Center for Food Safety (CFS) and
Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF) sued the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) last year, charging the agency with
withholding records pertaining to ractopamine's safety.12
-
Zilmax (Zilpaterol) is another beta-agonist drug used in
cattle to increase weight by as much as 30 pounds of lean
meat per cow. The drug got a slew of bad press last year
when Tyson Foods Inc declared it would no longer buy
Zilmax-fed cattle for slaughter, due to concerns over
behavioral problems in some of the cattle.13
A special report by Reuters14
revealed some of the more horrific effects Zilmax has on
cattle, including the loss of their hooves.
The drug is already banned for use in horses due to
severe side effects, including muscle tremors and rapid
heart rates that can last as long as two weeks after
stopping the drug.15
Zilmax is actually about 125 times more potent than
ractopamine, and according to a 2008 veterinary report,16
this may be why side effects have been overlooked in
ractopamine safety studies. Merck, the manufacturer of
Zilmax, has no plans on discontinuing the product however,17
and the FDA has not taken any action against the drug.
Rethink Your Shopping Habits to Protect Your Family's Health
I believe the movement toward sustainable food and ethical
meat is important for several reasons, including animal welfare,
human health, and environmental impact. In fact, I'm so
convinced of the cumulative harms of consuming meat from animals
raised in CAFOs that the ONLY type of meat I recommend eating
(and the only meat I will eat myself) is organically-raised,
grass-fed or pastured meats and animal byproducts. This
applies to all types of meat: beef, pork, and poultry, including
turkey.18
By purchasing your meat from smaller farms that raise their
animals in a humane fashion, according to organic
principles—which do NOT permit non-medical use of drugs and
growth promoters—you're promoting the proliferation of such
farms, which in the end will benefit everyone, including all the
animals. It will also help combat the rising tide of
antibiotic-resistant infections, which currently affects a
staggering two million Americans each year.
As noted earlier, about 23,000 of affected individuals end up
dying from their infection... The organic industry also tends to
favor far more humane butchering practices, which is an
important part of "ethical meat." The following organizations
can help you locate farm-fresh foods in your local area that has
been raised in a humane, sustainable manner:
- Local
Harvest -- This Web site will help you find
farmers' markets, family farms, and other sources of
sustainably grown food in your area where you can buy
produce, grass-fed meats, and many other goodies.
-
Farmers' Markets -- A national listing
of farmers' markets.
- Eat Well
Guide: Wholesome Food from Healthy Animals --
The Eat Well Guide is a free online directory of sustainably
raised meat, poultry, dairy, and eggs from farms, stores,
restaurants, inns, and hotels, and online outlets in the
United States and Canada.
- Community
Involved in Sustaining Agriculture
(CISA) -- CISA is dedicated to sustaining
agriculture and promoting the products of small farms.
- FoodRoutes
-- The FoodRoutes "Find Good Food" map can help you connect
with local farmers to find the freshest, tastiest food
possible. On their interactive map, you can find a listing
for local farmers, CSAs, and markets near you.
Copyright 1997- 2014 Dr. Joseph Mercola. All Rights Reserved.