How Antibiotics Created the Chicken Industry — A
Post# of 123761
https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/a...=210729101
Story at-a-glance
Antibiotic resistance is a vastly underestimated health threat; an estimated 23,000 Americans die each year from drug-resistant infections, including drug-resistant sexually transmitted diseases
Agriculture plays a major role in this; in the U.S., four times as many antibiotics are used in livestock as are used in human medicine
When animals are given antibiotics, it causes unnatural growth by altering their gut microbiome. In the process, some of those gut bacteria become antibiotic-resistant. Contaminated meat can then become a source of drug-resistant infections
Historically, chickens were scrawny little birds that no one thought to consume as a primary meal on a regular basis. Antibiotics changed this, when it was discovered the drug made the birds grow twice as large, twice as fast
Targeted breeding, creating a more full-breasted bird, and federal dietary guidelines that called for reducing saturated fat found in beef fueled consumption of chicken