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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Resistant Bacteria Found in Poultry Meat


Resistant Bacteria Found in Poultry Meat

GERMANY - Of 20 chicken tests done at random

 in supermarkets and discount stores in Berlin,

 Hamberg, Cologne, Nuremberg and Stuttgart, 


10 were positive with ESBL (Extended Spectrum

 Beta-lactamase) and methicillin-resistant 


bacteria MRSA (Methicillin resistant 

Staphylococcus aureus)
.
"This is the result of persistent disturbing abuse of

 antibiotics," said the president of the environmental

 organisation, BUND, Hubert Weiger, who criticised the use of antibiotics in animal production.

The organisation noted that the animals are subjected to prolonged treatment with a combination of different medicines.

According to Mr Weiger, in intensive poultry rearing

 between 22 and 24 chickens are maintained per

 square metre. And having an increasing number o
f animals in too small a space is only possible using
 large amounts of antibiotics.

Over-use of antibiotics such as cephalosporins, food

 additives used in livestock and farm animals to
 promote growth, accelerate the development of
 resistance to antibiotics.
The proliferation of antibiotic-resistant bacteria poses


 a danger to people with weak immune systems, such

 as the elderly, sick, children and pregnant women. In extreme cases, an infection can even lead to death.

It is estimated that at European level there are about 25,000 infections with antibiotic-resistant bacteria a year.

Indonesia Says Bird Flu Is Under Control; EXPERT DISAGREES


Another death caused by bird flu in Indonesia
JAKARTA - The Health Ministry in Indonesia said yesterday a 24-year-old man infected with bird flu had died in the capital Jakarta, the country's third fatal case in three months.


The man likely contracted the H5N1 avian influenza virus from birds living around his house, a Health Ministry official was quoted as saying by AFP.


The authorities are currently waiting for lab results to determine if the birds around his home were infected with the virus.


Media reports said the man had died on Saturday after being rejected by a hospital that specialised in bird flu. Two other hospitals had misdiagnosed him on New Year's Eve with a gastric infection and dengue fever.


The man had died on his way to another hospital on the capital's north-eastern outskirts, reports said.


According to the World Health Organization, Indonesia has been the hardest-hit by bird flu, with 150 deaths reported between 2003 and 2011.