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Thread: Hopkins study on poultry products.

  1. #11
    French Café Moderator Cosette123's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Luc View Post
    Crapageddon.
    very good, Luc!
    Severe anxiety since childhood .SSRIs for OCD.
    Major traumatism in my life:Prozac during short periods.
    Deroxat (=Paxil) during 7 years.
    Three unsuccessful atempts to quit.
    Deroxat free since may 2008 (Cold turkey )

  2. #12
    Founder Barbara's Avatar
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    OMG Shit Happens
    "You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star." -- Nietzsche

  3. #13
    Founder Barbara's Avatar
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    KRISTOF: Who knew our poultry was on Prozac?

    The Press Democrat
    6 April 2012

    Nicholas D. Kristof is a columnist for the New York Times.


    Let's hope you're not reading this column while munching on a chicken sandwich.

    That's because my topic today is a pair of new scientific studies suggesting that poultry on factory farms are routinely fed caffeine, active ingredients of Tylenol and Benadryl, banned antibiotics and even arsenic.

    “We were kind of floored,” said Keeve E. Nachman, a co-author of both studies and a scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Center for a Livable Future.*“It's unbelievable what we found.”

    He said that the researchers had intended to test only for antibiotics. But assays for other chemicals and pharmaceuticals didn't cost extra, so researchers asked for those results as well.
    .....

    One study, just published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, Environmental Science & Technology, found that feather meal routinely contained a banned class of antibiotics called fluoroquinolones. These antibiotics (such as Cipro) are illegal in poultry production because they can breed antibiotic-resistant “superbugs” that harm humans. Already, antibiotic-resistant infections kill more Americans annually than AIDS, according to the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

    The same study also found that one-third of feather-meal samples contained an antihistamine that is the active ingredient of Benadryl. The great majority of feather meal contained acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol. And feather-meal samples from China contained an antidepressant that is the active ingredient in Prozac.

    Poultry-growing literature has recommended Benadryl to reduce anxiety among chickens, apparently because stressed chickens have tougher meat and grow more slowly. Tylenol and Prozac presumably serve the same purpose.

    Researchers found that most feather-meal samples contained caffeine. It turns out that chickens are sometimes fed coffee pulp and green tea powder to keep them awake so that they can spend more time eating. (Is that why they need the Benadryl, to calm them down?) The other peer-reviewed study, reported in a journal called Science of the Total Environment, found arsenic in every sample of feather meal tested. Almost 9 in 10 broiler chickens in the U.S. had been fed arsenic, according to a 2011 industry estimate.

    These findings will surprise some poultry farmers because even they often don't know what chemicals they feed their birds. Huge food companies require farmers to use a proprietary food mix, and the farmer typically doesn't know exactly what is in it.

    I asked the U.S. Poultry and Egg Association for comment, but it said that it had not seen the studies and had nothing more to say.

    What does all this mean for consumers? The study looked only at feathers, not meat, so we don't know exactly what chemicals reach the plate, or at what levels. The uncertainties are enormous, but I asked Nachman about the food he buys for his own family. “I've been studying food-animal production for some time, and the more I study, the more I'm drawn to organic,” he said. “We buy organic.”

    I'm the same. I used to be skeptical of organic, but the more reporting I do on our food supply, the more I want my own family eating organic — just to be safe.

    To me, this underscores the pitfalls of industrial farming. When I was growing up on our hopelessly inefficient family farm, we didn't routinely drug animals. If our chickens grew anxious, the reason was perhaps a fox — and we never tried to resolve the problem with Benadryl.
    My take is that the business model of industrial agriculture has some stunning accomplishments, such as producing cheap food that saves us money at the grocery store. But we all may pay more in medical costs because of antibiotic-resistant infections.

    Frankly, after reading these studies, I'm so depressed about what has happened to farming that I wonder: Could a Prozac-laced chicken nugget help?
    "You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star." -- Nietzsche

  4. #14
    Founder Luc's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Barbara View Post
    The uncertainties are enormous, but I asked Nachman about the food he buys for his own family. “I've been studying food-animal production for some time, and the more I study, the more I'm drawn to organic,” he said. “We buy organic.
    This trend is rightly picking up steam. The only problem is that the Big Agra (the likes of Monsanto) are refusing to label the GMO products, so that the client wouldn't know which is which, plus they intentionally blur up the definitions of GMO and organic. The good thing is that society is waking up to it all in droves.
    Keep walking. Just keep walking.

  5. #15
    Founder stan's Avatar
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    we have to eat more fish!

  6. #16
    Founder Sheila's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Barbara View Post
    Poultry-growing literature has recommended Benadryl to reduce anxiety among chickens, apparently because stressed chickens have tougher meat and grow more slowly. Tylenol and Prozac presumably serve the same purpose.
    .........
    Meds free since June 2005.

    "An initiation into shamanic healing means a devaluation of all values, an overturning of the profane world, a peeling away of inveterate handed-down notions of the world, liberation from everything preconceived. For that reason, shamanism is closely connected with suffering. One must suffer the disintegration of one's own system of thought in order to perceive a new world in the higher space."
    -- Holger Kalweit

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