Eat chicken at your own risk

Every second or third time you eat chicken; there is a good chance that you’re also taking in not many but some antibiotics. And if you think this will make you healthier, think for a second time — this only gives rise to superbugs which are resistant to antibiotics.

The Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) has conducted a study and found that rampant use of antibiotics in chickens, with 40 per cent samples testing positive for antibiotics used for treating serious ailments in human beings, for instance tuberculosis.

Even vegetarians are in risk, because the bacteria from the gut of a drug-resistant chicken can get into the environment and enter the bodies of people who don’t eat it directly.

The analysis, carried out over a period of six months, tested about 70 samples of chicken — liver, muscle and kidney — from Delhi and NCR for the presence of six antibiotics widely used in poultry: doxycycline, chlortetracycline, enrofloxacin, oxytetracycline, ciprofloxacin and neomycin.

“Our study is only the tip of the iceberg. There are many more antibiotics that are rampantly used but which the lab has not tested. Our study proves their rampant use and shows that it can be strongly linked to growing antibiotic resistance in humans in India,” says CSE’s deputy director general and head of the lab Chandra Bhushan.
Chicken is the sole largest meat product consumed in India.

“Residues of five of the six antibiotics were found in all the three tissues of the chicken samples. Of the 40 per cent samples found tainted with antibiotic residues, 22.9 per cent contained residues of only one antibiotic while the remaining samples had residues of more than one antibiotic,” the study said.

The antibiotics are used in the poultry industry as a growth promoter and chickens are fed antibiotics with the intention that they gain weight and grow faster.

With India having no regulations to have power over antibiotic use in the poultry industry, the CSE has called for regulations, including prohibition of antibiotic use as growth promoters in poultry.