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  • 2 years ago
Tyson Adds Antibiotics to Some ‘No Antibiotics Ever’ Chicken.
Tyson Foods is reintroducing certain antibiotics to its chicken supply chain and will drop its "no antibiotics ever" tagline from Tyson-branded chicken products, a Tyson spokesperson said on Sunday.

This will involve drugs that the company said are not important to human health.

The antibiotics that Tyson plans to add to some of its chickens' diets are known as ionophores, a Wall Street Journal report said on Sunday, citing people familiar with the matter. This will affect all fresh, frozen and ready-made products under its brand.

Ionophores are mainly used to control a disease in poultry called coccidiosis, maintain intestinal integrity, and help deliver good bird health. According to the report, the World Health Organization does not consider them to be medically important for treating human illnesses.

"Based on current science, Tyson branded products are transitioning to No Antibiotics Important to Human Medicine (NAIHM) which is expected to be complete by the end of the calendar year," a Tyson Foods spokesperson said.

In 2017, the U.S. meatpacker had switched its retail line of company-branded chicken products to birds raised without any antibiotics.

(Reporting by Shivani Tanna and Gursimran Kaur in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Chandni Shah; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Lisa Shumaker).

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00:00 Tyson adds antibiotics to some "No Antibiotics Ever" chicken. Tyson's reintroducing an ingredient
00:06 to some of its "No Antibiotics Ever" chicken, antibiotics.
00:11 The company told The Wall Street Journal it would drop the labeling from some of its chicken
00:15 products as it introduces antibiotics that supposedly aren't important to humans.
00:21 Those antibiotics, ionophores, help control a disease found in poultry, according to the
00:26 journal.
00:28 Public health officials have cautioned against antibiotics in food products, fearing they
00:32 interfere with treatments necessary to address human illnesses.
00:36 "We base our decisions on sound science and an evolving understanding of the best practices
00:41 impacting our customers, consumers and the animals in our care," a spokesperson said.
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