See All-Creatures.org Health Position and Disclaimer
They can contaminate plants such as spinach, tomatoes, lettuce, and melons via animal-based fertilizer, runoff from animal farming operations, and cross-contamination handling, as when a head of lettuce is touched by hands covered with infectious microbes that have been transferred to the hands from contaminated meat, eggs or dairy products. But don’t expect government or industry to trumpet this information.
As published with added information by Animals 24-7.
Vegan Delights By Beth Clifton - the vegan delights featured in this
collage by Beth Clifton can be contaminated with infectious microbes flowing
from animal farms.
“Unfortunately, we’ve seen—specifically with ongoing outbreaks in the
romaine lettuce industry in addition to all the other outbreaks that we’re
acutely aware of—Listeria in cantaloupe, Salmonella, and others.”
– “The food safety imperative: Talking with attorney Bill Marler,”
Food Safety News, February 22, 2022.
In the rare event that the mainstream media mentions an outbreak of
Salmonella, E. coli, or other foodborne illness in people that
the FDA or the USDA has traced to a fruit or vegetable such as lettuce or
cantaloupe, the fact that the causative pathogen is of animal origin is
seldom noted in the coverage. Little wonder, given that agribusiness and the
U.S. Department of Agriculture resist implicating animal farming in their
reports on these “plant-based” outbreaks.
People are accordingly led to believe that the fruits and vegetables they
buy at the store or eat in a restaurant can somehow generate contamination
by pathogens (disease-causing microbes) whose natural habitat is the
intestines, liver or other organs of animals. While fruits and vegetables
can carry these pathogens, they do not originate them. The
cantaloupe is not the culprit.
Salmonella, E. coli, Campylobacter, and
Listeria are common bacterial causes of sickness in people. They can
contaminate plants such as spinach, tomatoes, lettuce, and melons via
animal-based fertilizer, runoff from animal farming operations, and
cross-contamination handling, as when a head of lettuce is touched by hands
covered with infectious microbes that have been transferred to the hands
from contaminated meat, eggs or dairy products. But don’t expect government
or industry to trumpet this information.
It was thus refreshing to read a February 22 article in the online food
science publication Food Safety News, in which the speaker connects
contaminated fruits and vegetables with industrialized animal farming. In
the article, Bill Marler, an attorney specializing in cases of foodborne
illness outbreaks, and the founder, in 2008, of Food Safety News,
has this to say:
"If you look at the outbreaks that have occurred in the last decade, specifically with respect to leafy greens, there’s always a cow somewhere in the equation. There’s always a feedlot nearby, or always a dairy farm nearby. And one of the frustrating things for FDA and USDA is being able to do the underlying research, to know that the source of the contamination really was that farm, or really wasn’t. But FDA inspectors cannot go onto cattle farms or feedlots. If we’re going to have ready-to-eat food, we’ve got to really start to think about the environment in which it’s grown."
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, describing
zoonotic
diseases, meaning diseases that can spread between human and nonhuman
animals under various conditions, observes that “Zoonotic diseases are very
common, both in the United States and around the world. Scientists estimate
that more than 6 out of every 10 known infectious diseases in people can be
spread from animals, and 3 out of every 4 new or emerging infectious
diseases in people come from animals.”
Concerning foodborne diseases, the CDC states that “Each year, 1 in 6
Americans get sick from eating contaminated food.” People get sick from
eating or drinking “something unsafe, such as unpasteurized (raw) milk,
undercooked meat or eggs, or raw fruits and vegetables that are contaminated
with feces from an infected animal.”
An irony in most discussions of zoonotic diseases is that these diseases,
bacterial and viral in particular, are not just transferable from nonhuman
animals to humans, but that they are increasingly being transmitted from
humans to nonhuman animals by way of the conditions under which humans are
forcing nonhuman animals, worldwide, to live. Eroding animals’ natural
habitats, jostling animals of different species together in unsanitary live
animal markets, and confining billions of chickens, cows, pigs, turkeys,
ducks, fishes and other animals in the cesspools we call factory farms – all
of these conditions, including animal-research laboratories, are making
animals sick with diseases that carry over into the human population.
In
China's Wet Markets, America's Factory Farming, Matthew Scully, author of
DOMINION: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy,
writes that while Western societies don’t normally eat “pangolins, turtles,
civets, peacocks, monkeys, horses, foxes, and wolf cubs . . . for the
animals we do eat, we have sprawling, toxic, industrial ‘mass-confinement’
farms that look like concentration camps. National ‘herds’ and ‘flocks’ that
all would expire in their misery but for a massive use of antibiotics, among
other techniques, to maintain their existence amid squalor and disease,
[are] an infectious ‘time bomb’ closer to home as bacterial and viral
pathogens gain in resistance.”
What Bill Marler calls “the environment” of agriculture starts inside the
farmed animal confinement complexes. The misery, squalor, antibiotics and
diseases in these places spill out into the surrounding environment
contaminating water, fruits and vegetables, and making farm workers sick;
these same animal farm elements travel to the supermarket , restaurant, and
home, and into people’s mouths, to be spilled back out into the environment
in the form of zoonotic diseases that infect human and nonhuman animals and
contaminate crops – the crops that are fed to the animals and those that are
grown for direct human consumption.
So far, eating misery and the physical manifestations of misery prevails
over eating healthy and humane in the habits of humanity. What will it take
to bring these habits to a higher standard? We have the knowledge, we have
the food; the question is, how do we empower the will?
Return to Food Hazards in Animal Flesh and By-products
We began this archive as a means of assisting our visitors in answering many of their health and diet questions, and in encouraging them to take a pro-active part in their own health. We believe the articles and information contained herein are true, but are not presenting them as advice. We, personally, have found that a whole food vegan diet has helped our own health, and simply wish to share with others the things we have found. Each of us must make our own decisions, for it's our own body. If you have a health problem, see your own physician.