Meat was contaminated with
a strain of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
A British newspaper has
reported that tests on pork products sold at two major UK supermarket chains
found three samples contaminated with a livestock strain
of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA.
According to The Guardian newspaper,
the test results raise concerns that the country “is on the brink of
another food scandal” similar to recent revelations of Campylobacter, Salmonella and E. coli on chicken sold at retail.
The most recent tests were done on minced samples of 97 U.K.-produced
pork products sold at Asda Stores Ltd., a subsidiary of Wal-Mart Stores Inc.,
and Sainsbury’s. They are two of the largest supermarket chains in
Britain.
The report, a joint effort between the newspaper and the non-profit
Bureau of Investigative Journalism, noted that a loophole in British import
rules allows live pigs from Denmark and other countries to enter the U.K. although
they may be infected with MRSA CC398, the livestock strain of the
potentially deadly superbug.
Public health officials are concerned about superbugs because even the
strongest antibiotics available might not cure some people who become infected
by MRSA, which can be contracted from eating infected
meat or through contact with infected animals.
And while
MRSA can be destroyed by thorough cooking, it can be passed on to others
through inadequate hygiene practices.
The Guardian reported that without
sufficient action, MRSA CC38 could spread throughout the U.K. as it has in
Denmark. It may have infected as many as 12,000 people in that country and has
been found on two-thirds of Danish pig farms, according to the newspaper
report.
“Thousands
of people have contracted the livestock-associated strain of MRSA in
Denmark and six have died from it in the last five years,” the Bureau of
Investigative Journalism stated.
British pig farms are not regularly screened for MRSA CC398 because
the government believes that it poses a relatively low risk to human
health. The Guardian noted that two confirmed cases have
been reported on U.K pig farms, one in eastern England and one in Northern
Ireland.
In response to the report, Asda released this statement: “Our customers
can be assured that we are working closely with industry groups and farmers to
make sure that antibiotics are used responsibly in farm animals. We are
doing all we can to promote good animal health and welfare conditions without
relying on antibiotics.”
Source: www.theguardian.com
› Environment › Farming
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