Guest guest Posted August 5, 2009 Report Share Posted August 5, 2009 The Superbug in Your Supermarket A potentially deadly new strain of anti-biotic-resistant microbes may be widespread in our food supply. Protect your loved ones with Prevention's Special Report. _http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/the-superbug-in-your-supermarket/9b99 ce1071ff1210VgnVCM10000030281eac____/nutrition.recipes/grocery.guru/food.saf ety.basics?cm_mmc=Spotlight-_-08052009-_-Nutrition%20and%20Recipes-_-The%20S uperbug%20in%20Your%20Supermarket_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/the-superbug-in-your-supermarket/9b99ce10\ 71ff1210VgnVCM10000030281eac____/nutr ition.recipes/grocery.guru/food.safety.basics?cm_mmc=Spotlight-_-08052009-_- Nutrition%20and%20Recipes-_-The%20Superbug%20in%20Your%20Supermarket) About 2 years ago, dozens of workers at a large _chicken_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/chicken-Recipes.aspx) hatchery in Arkansas began experiencing mysterious skin rashes, with painful lumps scattered over their _hands_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/take-time-off-your-hands/8f23100c9d814110\ VgnVCM10000013281eac____/lifelong.beauty/anti.aging.arsenal/p roducts) , arms, and legs. " They hurt real bad, " says Joyce Long, 48, a 32-year veteran of the hatchery, where until recently, workers handled eggs and chicks with bare _hands_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/take-time-off-your-hands/8f23100c9d814110\ VgnVCM10000013281eac____/lifelong.beauty/anti ..aging.arsenal/products) . " When we went and got cultured, doctors told us we had a superbug. " Its name, she learned, was MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. This form of staph bacteria developed a mutation that resists antibiotics (including methicillin), making it hard to treat, even lethal. According to the CDC, certain types of MRSA infections kill 18,000 Americans a year--more than die from AIDS. Soon coworkers at the nearby processing plant, where hundreds of thousands of _chicken_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/chicken-Recipes.aspx) carcasses are prepped daily for sale, began finding the lumps. Dean Reeves, 50, an 11-year employee, went to the hospital with an excruciating bump on her thigh she thought was a spider bite. It wasn't: She, too, had contracted MRSA, as had her husband, Bill, 46, who also works at the facility. Since late 2007, Dean has had monthly relapses. Even the safety glasses, gloves, and smocks workers wear (along with upgraded regular cleaning of equipment) aren't enough to protect them, says Bill. " We work so fast, we often stick ourselves with knives or scissors and get blood on us from head to foot. " When a swelling rose over one of his eyes, he was told he might go blind; if the infection progressed to his brain, he'd die. Did any _food safety_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/categorypage.do?channel=nutrition.recipes & categor\ y=grocery.guru & topic=food.safety.basics) agency test for MRSA in this plant's chickens, which were then sold to the public and served on American dinner tables? Did any government organization determine the source of the outbreak? Calls to the USDA, CDC, and Arkansas Department of _Health_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/channelpage.do?channel=health) yielded a no to both questions; the _poultry_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/poultry-Recipes.aspx) company that owns the operation did not respond to multiple requests for a comment from Prevention. Yet in recent years, studies have found MRSA in retail cuts of pork, _chicken_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/chicken-Recipes.aspx) , beef, and other meats in the United States, Europe, and Asia. To get answers, we investigated how MRSA has entered our food supply with limited government response; we considered the massive use of antibiotics in agriculture and its role in creating resistant microbes like MRSA; and we examined the safety of supermarket meat. Here, we offer our findings and expert advice to protect you and your family. Are You At Risk? You've probably heard of people contracting certain strains of MRSA in hospitals, where it causes many illnesses: postsurgical infections, pneumonia, bacteremia, and more. Others encounter different types of the bug in community centers such as gyms, where skin contact occurs and items like sports equipment are shared; this form causes skin infections that may become systemic and turn lethal. Then in 2008, a new source and strain of MRSA emerged in the United States. Researcher Tara Smith, PhD, an assistant professor of epidemiology at the University of Iowa, studied two large Midwestern hog farms and found the strain, ST398, in 45% of farmers and 49% of pigs. The startling discovery-- and the close connection between animal _health_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/channelpage.do?channel=health) and our own that it implied--caused widespread publicity and much official hand-wringing. To date, though, the government has yet to put a comprehensive MRSA inspection process in place, let alone fix our problematic meat-production system. You may not have the same close contact with meat that a processing plant worker has, but scientists warn there is reason for concern: Most of us handle meat daily, as we _bread_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/bread-Recipes.aspx) _chicken_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/chicken-Recipes.aspx) cutlets, trim fat from _pork_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/Pork-Recipes.aspx) , or form chopped _beef_ (http://recipes.prevention.com/RecipeSearch/Beef-Recipes.aspx) into burgers. Cooking does kill the microbe, but MRSA thrives on skin, so you can contract it by touching infected raw meat when you have a cut on your hand, explains Stuart Levy, MD, a Tufts University professor of microbiology and medicine. MRSA also flourishes in nasal passages, so touching your nose after touching meat gives the bug another way into your body, adds Smith. [continued] Page 1 | _2_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/the-superbug-in-your-supermarket/9b99ce10\ 71ff1210VgnVCM10000030281eac____/nutrition.recipes/grocery ..guru/food.safety.basics/0/0/2) | _3_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/the-superbug-in-your-supermarket/9b99ce10\ 71ff1210VgnVCM10000030281eac____/ nutrition.recipes/grocery.guru/food.safety.basics/0/0/3) | _4_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/the-superbug-in-your-supermarket/9b99ce10\ 71ff1210 VgnVCM10000030281eac____/nutrition.recipes/grocery.guru/food.safety.basics/0 /0/4) | _5_ (http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/the-superbug-in-your-supermarket/9b99ce10\ 71ff1210VgnVCM10000030281eac____/nutrition.recipes/grocery. guru/food.safety.basics/0/0/5) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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