Poultry on the Estonian market is infected with superbugs, a study says

Published 2024년 6월 20일

Tridge summary

A study by Triin Tedersoo from the Estonian University of Life Sciences has revealed that imported poultry meat from Lithuania and Latvia sold in Estonia is contaminated with highly antibiotic-resistant Campylobacter spp., posing significant health risks. The research found that 90.2% of Campylobacter strains from broiler chicken meat in 2018-2019 were resistant to one or more antimicrobials, while Estonian-origin broiler chicken meat showed no resistance. The study underscores the need for improved practices in the poultry industry to combat antimicrobial resistance and highlights the broader issue of superbugs in the food supply, stressing the importance of responsible antibiotic use.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Imported poultry meat on the Estonian market is contaminated with campylobacters resistant to antibiotics and potentially hazardous to customers, a researcher has reported. “The current study revealed that broiler chicken meat of Lithuanian and Latvian origin sold in Estonian retail stores was contaminated with highly resistant Campylobacter spp,” Triin Tedersoo, a researcher from the Estonian University of Life Sciences said, adding that high genetic diversity was observed among the Campylobacter isolates from fresh broiler chicken meat samples. The study’s findings are alarming: a staggering 90.2% of the Campylobacter strains isolated from broiler chicken meat in 2018–2019 were resistant to one or more antimicrobials. This means that a significant share of poultry on the Estonian market is potentially hazardous to consumers. In contrast, Campylobacter isolates from fresh broiler chicken meat of Estonian origin were sensitive to all the tested antimicrobials, highlighting the ...

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