CBC News, the Canadian national TV network, has caused a stir in the food-blog world with the results of a nationwide investigation that found antibiotic-resistant bacteria contaminating supermarket chicken. In its words:
I haven't had time to watch the full program, but no question I think this kind of reporting is worth doing. Nothing brings the threat of agricultural antibiotic use home to people like showing them that resistant bacteria are living on the meat they might have brought home last night.
One important point, though: Don't think for a moment this is just a Canadian problem.
Last month, a team from the University of Ioannina in Greece analyzed in Foodborne Pathogens and Disease 428 samples of various retail meats they bought in northwest Greece over three years:
Last year, a team from the University of Iceland found fluoroquinolone-resistant E. coli passing from chickens to humans there (the drug Cipro is a fluoroquinolone, and the human isolates were Cipro-resistant), a multi-institution team from Canada found resistance to third-generation cephalosporins in*Salmonella enterica *spreading from chicken meat to humans, and the Irish quasi-governmental group SafeFood released a long report (and hosted a conference) on "The Problem of Antimicrobial Resistance in the Food Chain." And of course MRSA ST398, the strain of drug-resistant staph that arose in food animals, has now been found in retails meats across the EU.
Oh, but none of those countries are the United States, you say. Then take a look at these:
Those graphics come from a little-read report put out every year by the US Food and Drug Administration as part of its participation in NARMS, the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System that's shared by the FDA, USDA and CDC. The FDA handles the part of NARMS that looks for resistant bacteria in meat (CDC does human illnesses, USDA does live animals), and the figures above show the percentages of Salmonella and enterococci that were found in retail chicken breasts between 2002 and 2008 (the most recent report) and were resistant to various drugs. The bar along the bottom of each figure shows the major drug classes. So in 2008: 45% of Salmonella on chicken were resistant to tetracycline and 30% to penicillins; among enterococci (common gut bacteria, and therefore common contaminants of meat during slaughtering), 65% resistant to tetracycline and more than 90% to lincosamides, which include the everyday drug clindamycin.
In the narrative portion of the report, the FDA said:
So, just to underline: Multi-drug resistant superbugs aren't only on chicken in Canada; if you buy chicken in the United States, they are more than likely on your chicken too.
And whatever country they are occurring in, the solution is the same. Drug-resistant bacteria in food won't diminish until we reduce the amount of drugs that food animals receive while they are raised.
Update: At Grist's Meat Wagon, Tom Philpott very kindly points out that I actually broke the news of the latest NARMS report, which I didn't realize (it was a busy day; see my next post for why). Apparently the report was posted to the FDA web site on Dec. 17, but neither of us can find any evidence that it was publicized, such as a press release on the FDA's press site. His larger point is important: