Consumer groups press Yum's KFC to tighten antibiotic rules
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[August 10, 2016]
By Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Consumer groups on
Wednesday will deliver a petition from more than 350,000 people to the
KFC fried chicken chain, calling on the Yum Brands Inc unit <YUM.N> to
stop the routine use of antibiotics by the companies that supply its
poultry.
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Several fast-food restaurants, which have been under fire for
selling unhealthy meals, are assuming the role of public health
change agent by forcing their respective meat suppliers to adopt new
practices aimed at keeping vital antibiotics working.
KFC has said that by 2017, antibiotics important to human medicine
will only be used to maintain chicken health and only under the
supervision and prescription of a licensed veterinarian. But critics
say that policy effectively allows for routine use of antibiotics by
its chicken suppliers.
As per federal government guidance, KFC does not allow the use of
such antibiotics for growth promotion. Medical experts warn that the
routine use of antibiotics to promote growth and prevent illness in
healthy farm animals contributes to the rise of drug-resistant "superbug"
infections that kill at least 23,000 Americans each year and
represent a "catastrophic threat" to global health.
More than 70 percent of medically important antibiotics in the
United States are sold for use on livestock and poultry.
McDonald's Corp last week said it switched to chicken raised without
antibiotics important to human health, months ahead of schedule.
Chick-fil-A Inc, which has surpassed KFC to become the No. 1 U.S.
fast-food chicken chain by revenue, has vowed to fully transition to
chicken raised with any antibiotics by the end of 2019.
KFC 'LAGGING'
"KFC is lagging woefully behind. Diners around the country want KFC
to step up," said Lena Brook, food policy advocate with the Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC), one of the groups delivering
petitions to KFC's headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky.
Yum, which this year plans to spin off its China business that
contributes roughly 40 percent of the company's overall operating
profit, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Yum's Taco Bell and Pizza Hut restaurants have set 2017 deadlines
for switching to chicken raised without antibiotics important to
human health. KFC, which purchases more chicken than those two
chains, has not matched that commitment.
"These lifesaving drugs should be used only when animals are sick,"
said Steven Roach, food safety program director at the Food Animals
Concern Trust.
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FACT and U.S. Public Interest Research Group Education Fund also
sent representatives to deliver the KFC petitions. The Center for
Science in the Public Interest and CREDO Action also collected
signatures.
That action comes a day after Yum investors submitted a shareholder
proposal requesting that the company quickly phase out harmful
antibiotic use in its meat supply.
The World Health Organization has warned that the world is moving
toward a post-antibiotic era in which many infections would no
longer be treatable because of the overuse of antibiotics.
Two U.S. patients are known to have been infected with bacteria
carrying the mcr-1 superbug gene that makes germs highly resistant
to a last-resort class of antibiotics.
The mcr-1 gene has been found over the past six months in farm
animals and people in about 20 countries, including China, Germany
and Italy.
Health officials fear the mcr-1 gene will soon be found in bacteria
already resistant to all or virtually all other types of
antibiotics, potentially making infections untreatable.
Such discoveries have increased the urgency of calls to reduce
antibiotic use in beef and pork production. In April, 54 large
investors launched a campaign to curb the use of antibiotics in the
meat and poultry served by 10 large U.S. and British restaurant
groups, including Yum.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles, editing by G Crosse)
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