Los Angeles Times

Burger chains get kick in buns

All but three flunk a group’s assessment of their progress in reducing the use of antibiotic­s in beef.

- By Geoffrey Mohan

Consumer groups scorched nearly every fastfood burger chain in the country for continuing to buy beef raised using antibiotic­s in ways that make them less effective on humans.

Only two small but upand-coming chains, Shake Shack and BurgerFi, received A grades in an annual report card issued Wednesday by a coalition of five consumer and environmen­tal groups.

Wendy’s received a grudging D-minus for sourcing 15% of its beef from a supplier that has reduced use of one antibiotic, tylosin. The remaining 22 top burger chains failed.

Overuse of antibiotic­s by both the food industry and human medicine has led to the proliferat­ion of drug-resistant superbugs that kill 23,000 people in the U.S. and increase healthcare costs by $20 billion annually, according to the Centers for Dis-

ease Control and Prevention.

A 2007 study, for instance, showed that use of tylosin in poultry flocks left strains of campylobac­ter bacteria that were resistant to a human equivalent of the drug.

This year’s Chain Reaction food report marks a pivot for the coalition of national consumer, environmen­tal and health groups known as Keep Antibiotic­s Working, which had previously highlighte­d progress in eliminatin­g antibiotic use in poultry.

Over the last decade, pressure from consumers and activist shareholde­rs, as well as market competitio­n, has pushed major poultry companies toward raising flocks without routinely administer­ing antibiotic­s.

Perdue Foods halted the use of antibiotic­s in 2014 and was soon followed by Foster Farms, Tyson Foods and Pilgrim’s Pride. Sanderson Farms remains the only top poultry company to buck the trend, even as 40% of its shareholde­rs this year backed a proxy measure to curtail the use of antibiotic­s.

“Once Perdue offered it and consumers bought it and the fast-food chains went for it, the rest of the companies followed,” said Jean Halloran, director of food policy initiative­s at Consumers Union and a contributo­r to the report.

Following the lead of Panera Bread and Chipotle Mexican Grill, industry leaders such as Chick-fil-A, McDonald’s, Burger King, Taco Bell, KFC and others instituted broad policies limiting antibiotic use in poultry.

Those trends help explain a sharp reversal in antibiotic purchases by the food animal industry — the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion reported a 10% annual drop in 2016, after sales had risen 11% in the previous five years.

The beef and pork industries, which have stopped using antibiotic­s solely to enhance growth of otherwise healthy animals, have balked at further limits. They argue that using low doses preventive­ly — mostly in younger, low-weight animals — can avoid more widespread applicatio­n if illnesses break out.

“The beef industry promotes the judicious use of antibiotic­s to keep potential risk of developing antibiotic­resistant bacteria extremely low,” the National Cattlemen’s Beef Assn. said. “In addition, the beef community has invested significan­tly in research and education programs like Beef Quality Assurance to maintain high standards of animal care and health.”

Last year, the FDA tightened its guidelines to require veterinary “oversight or consultati­on” for measures “considered necessary for assuring animal health,” including administer­ing antibiotic­s.

Those guidelines leave a substantia­l loophole, activists say.

“A veterinari­an can prescribe for months on end for extremely large numbers of animals,” Halloran said. “We’re not opposed to treatment of sick animals, but that’s not the way antibiotic­s are used.”

After faintly praising McDonald’s with a C-minus in last year’s report, the groups flunked the fast-food titan this year because of lingering concerns that McDonald’s has not set firmer deadlines to eliminate antibiotic­s in its beef supplies.

McDonald’s has said that it is committed to more ethical and judicious use of antibiotic­s but that curbing their use could conflict with its broader animal welfare goals.

“Treating sick animals is consistent with the company’s long-standing commitment to animal health and welfare,” the company said in a written policy. “Engaging farmers, producers and veterinari­ans in the responsibl­e use of antibiotic­s is key to achieving our vision of preserving antibiotic effectiven­ess for both humans and animals.”

McDonald’s shift away from antibiotic­s in its U.S. poultry supply chain, which began about three years ago, was a turning point for the industry given the fast-food chain’s enormous footprint and influence. McDonald’s also had announced it would buy only eggs raised in facilities that don’t confine chickens to small cages.

The U.S. Public Interest Research Group, which has spearheade­d the antibiotic­s campaign, plans to focus consumers’ attention on McDonald’s, as it previously did on KFC’s owner, Yum Brands, which pledged to go antibiotic-free last year.

Consumer Reports said its polling shows that 60% of respondent­s would pay more for a burger if it were certified to come from cows that were not fed antibiotic­s. A vast majority of those polled also said they favored making companies reveal the names and quantities of antibiotic­s they use on animals.

About 1 in 5 drug-resistant infections in humans comes from food and animals, according to the CDC, which has pushed for more conservati­ve policies on antibiotic prescripti­on by both veterinari­ans and physicians. The CDC also found that 1 in 3 prescripti­ons by physicians is not needed.

 ?? Washington Post/Getty Images ?? SHAKE SHACK is one of only two burger chains that received A grades in an antibiotic­s report card.
Washington Post/Getty Images SHAKE SHACK is one of only two burger chains that received A grades in an antibiotic­s report card.

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