Thursday, September 21, 2006

"Regular" Beef & E-coli Spinach

The effects of irresponsibly-raised beef rear their ugly heads again.

From an editorial by Nina Planck running in today's New York Times:


E. coli is abundant in the digestive systems of healthy cattle and humans, and if your potato salad happened to be carrying the average E. coli, the acid in your gut is usually enough to kill it.

But the villain in [the current spinach] outbreak, E. coli O157:H7, is far scarier, at least for humans. Your stomach juices are not strong enough to kill this acid-loving bacterium, which is why it’s more likely than other members of the E. coli family to produce abdominal cramps, diarrhea, fever and, in rare cases, fatal kidney failure.

Where does this particularly virulent strain come from? It’s not found in the intestinal tracts of cattle raised on their natural diet of grass, hay and other fibrous forage. No, O157 thrives in a new — that is, recent in the history of animal diets — biological niche: the unnaturally acidic stomachs of beef and dairy cattle fed on grain, the typical ration on most industrial farms. It’s the infected manure from these grain-fed cattle that contaminates the groundwater and spreads the bacteria to produce, like spinach, growing on neighboring farms.



Read the complete editorial here.

Related posts: Bye Bye Beef, Quorn & More on US Beef, USDA Bans Import of Older Canadian Cattle Beef Due to Mad Cow Concerns

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