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From: Old Codger on 19 Apr 2008 02:10 On Fri, 18 Apr 2008 23:23:11 +0100, "Pat Gardiner" <patgardiner(a)btinternet.com> wrote: >...no doubt totally composed of Britain's bent government vets. > >No wonder they recently refused to publish the current figures on >Campylobacter in chicken until 2010. > >All faithfully recorded in the archives here on uk.business.agriculture. >http://groups.google.co.uk/group/uk.business.agriculture/search?q=Campylobacter&start=0&scoring=d& >16th March. > >The Food Standards Agency vets probably hoped they would all be retired with >a big lump sum by the time anyone found out. > >I have bad news for them... > >http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=560642&in_page_id=1770 > >Watchdog sounds alarm over the superbugs which are being passed to humans >through food > >By SEAN POULTER - 22:45pm on 18th April 2008 > >Watchdogs have sounded the alarm over superbugs which are being passed to >humans through food, such as chicken and even salads. > >Experts on the European Food Safety Authority(EFSA) say there is rising >concern over superbug forms of common food poisoning bacteria such as >campylobacter and salmonella. > >It is calling for a Europe-wide review of food safety regimes to tackle the >growing menace. > >Decades of treating farm animals with drugs have made bacteria like >salmonella resistant to many treatments > >The use of powerful drugs on farm animals for decades has led the bugs that >colonise the animals to mutate to become immune to the effects of the >chemicals. >When these bugs infect humans through food it is becoming increasingly >difficult for doctors to find antibiotics that will offer effective >treatment. > >A number of food studies in Britain and around the world have identified the >presence of these bugs and others, such as new forms of e.coli, in food. > >At the same time, Britain's Food Standards Agency(FSA) has recently reported >a rise in the number of people in this country falling sick from >Campylobacter poisoning. > >A report from EFSA's specialist panel on animal health and drugs, BIOHAZ, >has highlighted the need for a review of food safety regimes. > >The antibiotics used by doctors are also known as antimicrobials. While the >immunity developed by these common bugs is known as antmicrobial resistance. > >The BIOHAZ panel concluded: "Antimicrobial resistance of bacteria is a >growing concern as antimicrobials become less effective in fighting human >infections. >"This coincides with a rise in bacterial resistance to antimicrobials in >animal populations." > >It adds: "Resistant Salmonella and Campylobacter involved in human disease >are mostly spread through food. > >"The principal foods carrying such antimicrobial resistant bacteria are >poultry meat, eggs, pork or beef. > >"Contamination during preparation, handling and processing of fresh food of >plant origin, such as salads, is also of concern." > >The panel said the bugs are being passed to humans through meat. Salad >products can become contaminated if they are grown on land irrigated with >water containing animal slurry. > >It has recommended that "these potential contamination routes and the >control measures currently in place be reviewed in light of the most recent >scientific data". >Campylobacter is the most common cause of food poisoning in humans. > >FSA figures show that there were 42,226 known cases in humans in this >country in 2006, which represents a rise of more than 500 on the year >before. > >This figure is thought to significantly underestimate the true number of >infections because many people do not report food poisoning to their GPs. > >Campylobacter can lead to serious complications in vulnerable groups, >particularly the elderly and those already suffering from other illnesses >that weaken their immune system. > >Research by the watchdog put the death toll at 70 per year. > >FSA experts have warned that they watchdog may miss a target designed to >reduce the presence of campylobacter in chicken by 50per cent by 2010. > >Separately, a deadly new form of e.coli responsible for infecting up to >30,000 people a year, causing a terrible death toll, has been found on 32 >British farms. > >The discovery has triggered fears that the bug is spreading into the human >population through meat and milk. > >The virulent bug - ESBL e.col - is known to have killed hundreds of people >in several outbreaks across the UK in the past five years. > >But the true scale of infection and deaths caused by the bug, which is >linked to blood poisoning and urinary tract infections, is thought to be >much higher. > >Some estimates suggest as many as 4,000 deaths each year are linked to the >infection, which is more than MRSA. > >The UK goverment has set up a special committee to establish whether the bug >is being passed to humans through food.
From: Old Codger on 19 Apr 2008 18:48
Old Codger wrote: Not a word. Pete the troll is performing the old 'forge headers and copy and paste garbage' trick again. > On Fri, 18 Apr 2008 23:23:11 +0100, "Pat Gardiner" > <patgardiner(a)btinternet.com> wrote: As Pete never reads what he posts and desires only to provoke argument it is safest to assume that anything he espouses is at least unsafe and probably malicious. -- Old Codger e-mail use reply to field What matters in politics is not what happens, but what you can make people believe has happened. [Janet Daley 27/8/2003] |