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Superbug Found in Much of Our Retail Meat

We have no one to blame but ourselves. Our overuse of antibiotics has produced quite a few superbugs that cannot be killed by any but the most aggressive antibiotics, some of which have such severe side-effects that are nearly as bad as the microbes. But now there are reports that as much as 40% of our meat may be tainted with such a bug.

According to MSNBC,

More than 40 percent of packaged meats sampled from three Arizona chain stores tested positive for Clostridium difficile, a gut bug known as C. diff., according to newly complete analysis of 2006 data collected by a University of Arizona scientist.

Nearly 30 percent of the contaminated samples of ground beef, pork and turkey and ready-to-eat meats like summer sausage were identical or closely related to a super-toxic strain of C. diff blamed for growing rates of illness and death in the U.S. — raising the possibility that the bacterial infections may be transmitted through food.

“These data suggest that domestic animals, by way of retail meats, may be a source of C. difficile for human infection,” said J. Glenn Songer, a professor of veterinary science at the Tucson school, who talked with msnbc.com about work now under review by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Naturally there are plenty of experts who disagree, saying there's not enough evidence and that no documented cases have been cited.

While there's no reason to panic, there's also no reason to take this lightly.

Nearly 30 percent of the contaminated samples of ground beef, pork and turkey and ready-to-eat meats like summer sausage were identical or closely related to a super-toxic strain of C. diff blamed for growing rates of illness and death in the U.S. — raising the possibility that the bacterial infections may be transmitted through food.
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“These data suggest that domestic animals, by way of retail meats, may be a source of C. difficile for human infection,” said J. Glenn Songer, a professor of veterinary science at the Tucson school, who talked with msnbc.com about work now under review by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Read the whole report at the source, linked above.

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