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Antibiotics in Beef
any antibiotics at all,” Hal-
loran says. “But at a bare min-
imum, medically important
antibiotics—drugs used to
treat people, such as amoxi-
cillin, erythromycin, and
tetracycline—should never
be used for routine disease
prevention in animals.”
At least 2 million Ameri-
cans contract an antibiotic-
resistant infection every
year, and 23,000 die, accord-
ing to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. CR’s
calculations of the CDC data
show that about 20 percent
of these infections are linked
to food. CR’s survey found
that 1 in 3 Americans either
experienced an antibiotic-
resistant infection or knew
someone who had.
The Issue With Burgers
Because of the high use of
antibiotics in the beef indus-
try, the 2018 Chain Reaction
report zeroed in on burger-
focused restaurants.
The companies were sent
a survey, and their re-
sponses—along with public
statements by the compa-
nies in the press or on their
websites—were used to cal-
culate the score.
At BurgerFi and Shake
Shack—which both received
A ratings for their beef sourc-
ing policies—100 percent
of the beef served is raised
without any antibiotics.
Of the remaining 23 burger
restaurants, 22 received F’s,
meaning they give no indica-
tion of having a policy that
limits antibiotics in the beef
they serve. The remaining
company, Wendy’s, got a D-
minus. It says it made a com-
mitment this year to source a
small percentage of beef
“While companies should
be lauded for shifting to
no-antibiotic chicken, chicken
only accounts for 6 percent
of the usage of medically im-
portant antibiotics in the meat
industry,” says Jean Halloran,
director of food policy initia-
tives at Consumer Reports.
“By contrast, the beef indus-
try uses 43 percent.”
The Trouble With
Antibiotic Use
Giving healthy animals an-
tibiotics to prevent diseases
they can contract when
being raised in crowded, un-
sanitary conditions is a
major contributor to antibi-
otic resistance, in which the
bacteria that can cause ill-
ness don’t respond to drugs.
Those resistant bacteria can
end up in the food supply
and can infect you, leading
to serious, potentially deadly
illness. Infection can come
from touching or eating un-
dercooked, contaminated
meat; eating plants grown
with fertilizer made from
animals treated with antibi-
otics; or by drinking tainted
groundwater. Studies even
suggest that resistant bac-
teria could be transmitted
through the air.
Almost 80 percent of Amer-
icans think meat producers
should stop giving antibiotics
to animals that aren’t sick,
according to a recent Con-
sumer Reports nationally
representative survey of 1,
U.S. adults. “Ideally, healthy
animals would not be given
12 GUIDE TO WELLNESS CR.ORG
Nearly 80
percent
of Americans
think meat
producers
should
stop giving
antibiotics to
animals that
aren’t sick,
according to a
CR survey.
from producers who mini-
mize (but don’t eliminate) the
use of medically important
antibiotics in their cattle.
Halloran says the beef in-
dustry faces particular hur-
dles that make it challenging
to reduce its antibiotic use.
“For the first part of their
lives, most cows are raised
on the range, and rarely
given antibiotics,” she says.
“Then when they’re moved
to a feedlot for ‘finishing,’
they’re packed together
tightly and given a rich diet
of corn and soy. Cattle’s
natural diet is grass; feeding