ABOUT

Smart discussion of the latest science and news on toxins in your food, water, and air, and what government agencies should be doing to protect public health. Enviroblog is a project of EWG Action Fund. (More. . .)


FEED

 Subscribe in a Reader

Subscribe by Email


Mixed Greens
An EWG podcast for environmental health news on the go.


TWITTER UPDATES

    TIPS

    Did we miss something? Email Amanda.


    BLOGROLL


    STAY CONNECTED

    Get our monthly eNewsletter, action alerts, & environmental tips. [Privacy policy, About EWG]


    Mixed Greens 013: Don't get burned!

    How to choose a better sunscreen

    Spray? We never wanted to spray!


    FEATURED

    BPA in your body: How to minimize your exposure

    Caution: These 7 household items may feminize baby boys

    BPA in infant formula: This is not a call to panic

    Cheatsheet: Bisphenol A

    7 ways to reduce your exposure to PBDEs

    Your BPA questions, answered



    Ask EWG

    What is "fragrance"?

    Which infant formula is best?

    Is there eco-friendly jewelry?

    Are stainless steel water bottles safe?

    Is mineral-based makeup safer?


    SEARCH


    ARCHIVE

    « Childhood obesity increases dramatically | Main | Ask EWG: What can I do about fluoride in my water? »

    August 28, 2007

    How conventional hog farms pass the baton of antibiotic resistance

    conventionalpigfarm.jpgResearchers at the University of Illinois have concluded that antibiotic resistance created by the nearly ubiquitous use of antibiotics on large-scale hog farms is being transferred between organisms like it's a "relay race." Resistant bacteria end up in groundwater, which makes up 97 percent of drinking water in rural areas.

    Here's how it works:


    • Pigs at huge conventional farms are routinely fed and injected with the antibiotic tetracycline to treat and prevent illness.
    • Bacteria in the animals' digestive tracks and manure evolve genetic resistance to the drug. These super bugs are found in high quantities in manure lagoons (the giant ponds of waste that hog farms use as storage).
    • Leaking lagoons -- especially those built before the law required them to be lined -- allow bacteria to migrate to ground water.
    • Finally, bacteria carrying the gene for tetracycline resistance pass it off to other organisms like some kind of sci-fi Olympic torch.

    "If the genes are there," says lead researcher R.I. Mackie, "potentially they could get into the right organism at the right time and confer resistance to an antibiotic that's being used to treat disease."

    Read more at TerraDaily
    The abstract
    Enter The Meatrix

    « Childhood obesity increases dramatically |