Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Study raises health concerns over chickens bred in Punjab poultry farms

- Press Trust of India

WASHINGTON/NEWDELHI: Scientists have found high levels of antibiotic-resistant pathogens in chickens being raised for eggs and meat in poultry farms in Punjab, raising serious health concerns for humans.

Researcher­s from the US-based Center for Disease Dynamics,Economicsa­ndPolicy (CDDEP) collected samples from 530 birds in 18 poultry farms in Punjab and tested them for resistance to a range of antibiotic medication­s critical to human medicine. Two-thirds of the farms reported using antibiotic factors for growth promotion, according to the researcher­s.This simply means that antibiotic­s are overused at these farms to spur poultry growth, but the chickens gradually develop resistance to antibiotic­s. Once antibiotic­s do not work on such pathogens, they can carry that trait into the human body.

Dr AC Dhariwal, director of National Centre for Disease Control, said antibiotic resistance is a public health concern in India for which a national programme has been launched. “Different ministries including the ministry of agricultur­e which deals with usage of antibiotic­s in animal sector have also been involved,” he said while commenting on the outcome of the study.

Farmsample­s,whichrepor­ted using antibiotic factors, were three times more likely to be multidrug-resistant than samples from farms that did not use antibiotic­s to promote growth, the researcher­s said. The team found that meat farms had twice the rates of antimicrob­ial resistance that egg-producing farms had, as well as higher rates of multidrug resistance.

 ?? KALPAK PATHAK/HT ?? The study was published in the journal Environmen­tal Health Perspectiv­es.
KALPAK PATHAK/HT The study was published in the journal Environmen­tal Health Perspectiv­es.

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