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Hog Farms linked to infections

23 Nov 2013 7:35 PM | Anonymous
Environment / Health Hog farms linked to infections

Posted by on Tue, Sep 17, 2013 at 10:15 AM

click to enlargePROBLEM NEIGHBORS: Infection risk higher near hog farms, new research says.
  • PROBLEM NEIGHBORS: Infection risk higher near hog farms, new research says.
Still more news of interest in Arkansas from USA Today:

Living near a hog farm or a field fertilized with pig manure significantly increases the risk of being infected with a dangerous superbug, new research finds.

Two new studies published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine focus on a bacteria called methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus , or MRSA, which caused more than 80,000 invasive infections in the USA in 2011.

...In 2011, for the first time since officials began tracking invasive MRSA infections, more Americans were infected with MRSA in the community than in the hospital, one of the studies shows.

In the second study, researchers found that exposure to hog manure is related to 11% of MRSA infections, even among people who don't work on farms.


Hog farming has been in the news in Arkansas because of C and H Farm, the mass feeder pig operation industry giant Cargill is backing in Newton County along a major tributary to the Buffalo National River. Legal fights are underway over the inadequate environmental impact work done before permits were approved for the operation. The Arkansas Farm Bureau has been a leading advocate for the hog farm.

David Ramsey wrote on manure handling at C and H:

The controversy centers on the inevitable byproduct of the farm: pig crap. Based on C&H's nutrient management plan (NMP), the facility will generate more than 2 million gallons of manure and wastewater per year. The waste is first collected in 2-foot-deep concrete pits below the animals. Once the shallow pits, diluted with water, are filled, the waste drains into two large man-made storage ponds. Eventually, as the ponds fill, C&H will remove liquid waste and, in an agreement with local landowners, apply it as fertilizer on more than 600 acres of surrounding fields.

Comments

  • 10 Dec 2013 6:24 PM | Anonymous
    Below is a link for a very good documentary film on the issues concerning factory pig farming and its impact.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5KNGBm1LeA


    "Pig Business, The Film" - on YouTube.
    "Tracy Worcester's exploration into the origin of 'cheap' pork. "Pig Business" investigates the rise of factory pig farming, a system which abuses animals, pollutes the environment, threatens human health through dangerous overuse of antibiotics, and wrecks rural communities. The film shows how this system which was developed in the USA is now being used in eastern Europe from where the pork, often produced below legal animal welfare standards, is exported to other EU countries putting local farmers out of business".

    "Since the making of "Pig Business", new films have been produced in Canada, Chile, Ecuador, Germany, Hungary, Romania and USA. These country-specific versions of Pig Business include new footage and focus on specific stories and case studies from the country, or countries involved".

    http://www.farmsnotfactories.org/the_film/

    Tracy Worcester Bio from Wikipedia
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tracy_Louise_Ward
    Link  •  Reply

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