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Another Reason to Go Organic - Widespread Use of Drugs on Non-Organic Farms
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By Stacy Finz
San Francisco Chronicle, June 15, 2009
Straight to the Source
Conventional cattle ranchers and pig and chicken farmers routinely feed their animals a steady diet of antibiotics to prevent illness and help them grow fatter faster. But as consumers become more obsessed with what they eat, including an insatiable hunger for meat and chicken raised naturally, without drugs, more producers are promoting their products as antibiotic free.
But is there truth in advertising?
Even producers who have eliminated antibiotics may be using other bacteria-killing compounds in the anti-microbial family, which have a murky definition under the law. Although not all anti-microbials are defined as antibiotics by the Food and Drug Administration, their use opens up a minefield of issues.
Among them:
-- Anti-microbials are not listed on labels.
-- They work the same way as antibiotics.
-- Many people consider them to be harmful to the environment.
"The only way to know if a producer is using anti-microbials is to call the manufacturer and ask them," said Urvashi Rangan, a scientist for the nonprofit Consumers Union.
Click here for the rest of this article.
But is there truth in advertising?
Even producers who have eliminated antibiotics may be using other bacteria-killing compounds in the anti-microbial family, which have a murky definition under the law. Although not all anti-microbials are defined as antibiotics by the Food and Drug Administration, their use opens up a minefield of issues.
Among them:
-- Anti-microbials are not listed on labels.
-- They work the same way as antibiotics.
-- Many people consider them to be harmful to the environment.
"The only way to know if a producer is using anti-microbials is to call the manufacturer and ask them," said Urvashi Rangan, a scientist for the nonprofit Consumers Union.
Click here for the rest of this article.






