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Originally posted by manta
We have been giving a 2 page document telling us to stick to normal infection control procedures.
Originally posted by Denied
If normal procedjures arent adhered to, what are the state of some of the chickens when they end up on our plate?
Do diseased chickens get sent along with the rest?
Sounds like we are screwed if they dont follow guidelines......
Originally posted by manta
Originally posted by Denied
If normal procedjures arent adhered to, what are the state of some of the chickens when they end up on our plate?
Do diseased chickens get sent along with the rest?
Sounds like we are screwed if they dont follow guidelines......
NO they dont, it is part of my job ot see that they dont and i do my job to teh best of my ability. Every day i walk throigh each shed culling out small, injured, sick looking and anything that has died to stop disease spreading through the birds. they are also tested for many different bacteria before they go for slaughter to ensure they are safe to eat.
All of the above is part of my job which i take seriously and do to the best of my ability.
what you should probably bemore concerned about is what they chicken is fed to make it grow as fast as possible in as short a time as possible. From chick to the time they are slaughterd is as little as 34 days. as im not sure exactly what their feed comprises of im not going to go into detail, but with names like *grower* i will leave it up to you imagination. The average LEAN chicken can contain more than 1 pint of fat.
www.chicken.ca...
So what's in chicken feed, anyway?
* The main ingredient of all chicken feed (88%) is grains and grain by-products, protein-producing seeds, and meal made from them such as canola or soybean meal. So all chickens are essentially "grain-fed."
* In much smaller quantities (around 10%), various other protein sources such as meat and bone meal/vegetable fats, are added to improve the nutritional content, taste and texture of the feed.
* In much, much smaller quantities (1.5%), mineral and vitamin supplements are commonly added to prevent any nutrient deficiencies.
* There are no hormones in chicken feed. In Canada, the use of hormones in chicken feed has been banned since the 1960s.
* Chicken feed may also contain minute levels (less than 1 per cent) of additives such as enzymes and antibiotics to prevent disease and digestive problems. All of these additives are subject to strict regulations and are used in conjunction with good management, vaccination and hygiene practices.
Eleven stillborn piglets that had been genetically engineered (GE) at the University Guelph found their way into poultry feed in January. But Canadian government officials say consumers shouldn’t be concerned.
On Feb. 12, the CFIA said that researchers at the University of Guelph , who have bred transgenic pigs designed to excrete more environmentally friendly manure, reported 11 stillborn piglets were missing from a freezer.
A subsequent investigation found the animals, which were awaiting incineration, had been mistakenly picked up and sent to a rendering plant in late January, ending up in the poultry feed.
The CFIA has determined that the batch of feed was sold to at least 30 premises and fed mostly to laying hens whose eggs have already been sold. A small amount was fed to broiling chickens and turkeys.
The latest research shows just a milligram of infected feed is needed to trigger BSE in a cow, said Neil Cashman, professor of neurological disease at the University of Toronto.
According to Cashman, Canada should not be feeding any animals any material rendered from a cow because feed mix-ups are so common. He adds that the risk to humans is infinitesimal.
Cattle remains are still used as pig and chicken feed, but concerns about cross-contamination persist.
Many of us were surprised to learn that despite the F.D.A.'s 1997 ban on feeding cattle cattle meat and bone meal, feedlots continue to rear these herbivores as cannibals. When young, they routinely receive ''milk replacer'' made from bovine blood; later, their daily ration is apt to contain rendered cattle fat as well as feed made from ground-up pigs and chickens – pigs and chickens that may themselves have grown up on a diet of ground-up cows. But the grossest feedlot dish we read about in our newspapers over breakfast has to be ''chicken litter,'' the nasty stuff shoveled out of chicken houses – bedding, feathers and overlooked chicken feed. Since this chicken feed may contain the same bovine meat and bone meal that F.D.A. rules prohibit in cattle feed, those rules are, in effect, all but guaranteed to break themselves.