Does the use of antibiotics in food animals pose a risk to human health? A critical review of published data
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Abstract
The use of antibiotics in food animals selects for bacteria resistant to antibiotics used in humans, and these might spread via the food to humans and cause human infection, hence the banning of growth-promoters. The actual danger seems small, and there might be disadvantages to human and to animal health. The low dosages used for growth promotion are an unquantified hazard. Although some antibiotics are used both in animals and humans, most of the resistance problem in humans has arisen from human use. Resistance can be selected in food animals, and resistant bacteria can contaminate animal-derived food, but adequate cooking destroys them. How often they colonize the human gut, and transfer resistance genes…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Antibiotics
- Biology
- Antibiotic resistance
- Flora (microbiology)
- Microbiology
- Human health
- Campylobacter
- Animal food
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