We must start working toward a cruelty-free food system. Our lives, and the lives of billions of animals around the world, depend on it.
Hogs live out their last days in the "finishing shed," where they are
grouped by weight to give smaller animals a fair chance at food. Original
image from Carol M. Highsmith’s America, Library of Congress collection.
Digitally enhanced by rawpixel.
The meat and dairy industries, especially those that sell live animals
directly to consumers, are breeding grounds for deadly diseases and
illnesses. Cows, chickens, pigs, birds, and others are crammed into small
buildings and cells, bringing together thousands of animals in very tight
spaces. If one animal is sick, the rest of the population is immediately at
risk.
Such disregard for these creatures’ health and wellbeing is both abusive to
animals and dangerous to humans. From dirty air and water to the overuse of
antibiotics, the meat and dairy industries are perpetuating the spread of
bacterial infections, especially antibiotic-resistant strains, viruses, and
other zoonotic diseases.
With the recent COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak, the world is starting to
realize the dangers of animal agriculture, and it’s about time. Fortunately,
changing the way we treat animals can help avoid these pandemics in the
future.
Here are 5 deadly diseases linked to the
meat and dairy industries:
1. COVID-19 (2019 Novel Coronavirus)
While the jury is still out on which animal is ultimately responsible for
COVID-19’s jump to humans, scientists and other experts are confident the
virus originated in bats and spread to humans through a Chinese wet market.
At these wet markets, animals, both alive and dead, and people are put into
close proximity, creating an ideal environment for viruses and other
diseases to spread from host to host.
“Poorly-regulated, live-animal markets mixed with illegal wildlife trade,”
the Wildlife Conservation Society said in a statement, “offer a unique
opportunity for viruses to spillover from wildlife hosts into the human
population.”
Fortunately, China and other Asian countries are starting to crack down on
wildlife trading. Proposals to ban the dog and cat meat trade are being
considered, China has outlawed eating wildlife, and Vietnam might
permanently ban their wildlife meat trade. Hopefully, this pandemic shows
the importance of animal welfare for both animals and humans.
2. H1N1 (Swine Flu)
Before the recent COVID-19 outbreak, the last time the World Health
Organization declared a pandemic was for the swine influenza. H1N1, which is
the term given to the variant virus that eventually jumped from pigs to
humans, was first discovered in April 2009. By April 2010, the CDC estimated
that anywhere from 151,000 to 575,000 people died globally as a result of
the H1N1 pandemic.
Swine flu likely originated due to frequent contact between farm workers and
pigs combined with unsanitary factory-farming conditions and a lack of
concern for animal welfare. Unfortunately, once the genie is let out of the
bottle, there isn’t much we can do to put it back. To this day, H1N1
circulates as a seasonal flu virus.
3. H5N1 (Bird Flu)
Also called avian influenza, bird flu can jump from chickens and other
poultry livestock to humans. Though never as severe as swine flu, avian
influenza A viruses H5, H7, and H9 have infected people, with the H5N1 and
H7N9 strains being the most common.
Since 2013, at least 1,500 people fell victim to H7N9 and over 600 died as a
result of their illnesses. While these statistics pale in comparison to both
the COVID-19 and H1N1 pandemics, they do show how increased exposure to sick
birds is a dangerous game to play. With over 9 billion chickens slaughtered
every year in the United States alone, the opportunity for zoonotic
spillover is concerning.
4. Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA)
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is not a virus like the
novel coronavirus, swine flu, or bird flu. Rather, it’s a bacterial
infection – a staph infection to be more specific. Staphylococcus aureus is
a dangerous bacteria that can cause pneumonia, heart valve infections, and
bone infections, though it is typically treated with methicillin.
Unfortunately, likely due to a severe overuse of antibiotics, Staphylococcus
aureus became resistant to methicillin, and MRSA was born.
How is all of this related to the meat and dairy industry? The FDA currently
allows farmers to administer antibiotics to their livestock as a “disease
prevention” tactic, leaving meat- and dairy-consuming humans to massively
and unknowingly overuse these important drugs.
“To keep these miracle drugs working when sick people and animals need
them,” Interim Director of Food and Agriculture at the Natural Resources
Defense Council, Lena Brook, said, “[the] FDA must end the widespread
practice of using these drugs for so-called ‘disease prevention’ and set
clear targets for antibiotics reduction in [the meat and dairy industries].”
If we don’t drastically change our current food system, a U.N. report
estimates that over 10 million people per year will die from drug-resistant
infections by 2050. The easiest way to ensure you’re not ingesting
unnecessary antibiotics is to adopt a plant-based diet.
5. Salmonella
Salmonella is the most frequently reported foodborne bacterial infection in
the United States. It’s typically transmitted from contaminated animal meat,
eggs, or dairy and infects the intestinal tract. If it happens to move
beyond the intestinal tract, salmonella is deadly, though most typically
recover within 48 to 72 hours.
Unfortunately, like MRSA, salmonella is starting to develop immunities to
certain antibiotics, which makes treating severe cases much more difficult
for health professionals. As more animals are forced to live in closer
proximity to others, factory farms ignore animal welfare standards, and
environmental protections aren’t awarded to those that live near these
facilities, salmonella outbreaks could increase in frequency.
We must start working toward a cruelty-free food system. Our lives, and the
lives of billions of animals around the world, depend on it.
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
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