How
Safe Is Your Ground Beef?
If you don’t know how the ground beef you eat was raised, you
may be putting yourself at higher risk of illness from dangerous bacteria. You
okay with that?
By Andrea Rock
Last updated: August 24, 2015
The American love affair with ground beef endures. We put it
between buns. Tuck it inside burritos. Stir it into chili. Even as U.S. red
meat consumption has dropped overall in recent years, we still bought 4.6
billion pounds of beef in grocery and big-box stores over the past year. And
more of the beef we buy today is in the ground form—about 50 percent vs. 42
percent a decade ago. We like its convenience, and often its price.
The appetite persists despite solid evidence—including new
test results here at Consumer Reports—that ground beef can make you seriously
sick, particularly when it’s cooked at rare or medium-rare temperatures under
160° F. “Up to 28 percent of Americans eat ground beef that’s raw or
undercooked,” says Hannah Gould, Ph.D., an epidemiologist at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
All meat potentially contains bacteria that—if not destroyed
by proper cooking—can cause food poisoning, but some meats are more risky than
others. Beef, and especially ground beef, has a combination of qualities that
can make it particularly problematic—and the consequences of eating tainted
beef can be severe.
Indeed, food poisoning outbreaks and recalls of
bacteria-tainted ground beef are all too frequent. Just before the July 4
holiday this year, 13.5 tons of ground beef and steak destined for restaurants
and other food-service operations were recalled on a single day because of
possible contamination with a dangerous bacteria known as E. coli O157:H7. That
particular bacterial strain can release a toxin that damages the lining of the
intestine, often leading to abdominal cramps, bloody diarrhea, vomiting, and in
some cases, life-threatening kidney damage. Though the contaminated meat was
discovered by the meat-packing company’s inspectors before any cases of food
poisoning were reported, we haven’t always been so lucky.
Between 2003 and 2012, there were almost 80 outbreaks of E.
coli O157 due to tainted beef, sickening 1,144 people, putting 316 in the
hospital, and killing five. Ground beef was the source of the majority of those
outbreaks. And incidences of food poisoning are vastly underreported. “For
every case of E. coli O157 that we hear about, we estimate that another 26
cases actually occur,” Gould says. She also reports that beef is the fourth
most common cause of salmonella outbreaks—one of the most common foodborne
illnesses in the U.S.—and for each reported illness caused by that bacteria, an
estimated 29 other people are infected...
The Risks of Going
Rare
It’s not surprising to find bacteria on favorite foods such
as chicken, turkey, and pork. But we usually choose to consume those meats
well-cooked, which makes them safer to eat. Americans, however, often prefer
their beef on the rare side. Undercooking steaks may increase your risk of food
poisoning, but ground beef is more problematic. Bacteria can get on the meat
during slaughter or processing. In whole cuts such as steak or roasts, the
bacteria tend to stay on the surface, so when you cook them, the outside is
likely to get hot enough to kill any bugs. But when beef is ground up, the
bacteria get mixed throughout, contaminating all of the meat—including what’s
in the middle of your hamburger. (Find out what happened when our Consumerist
colleagues tried four ways to cook a burger that’s safe to eat but doesn’t taste like
leather.)
Also contributing to ground beef’s bacteria level: The meat
and fat trimmings often come from multiple animals, so meat from a single
contaminated cow can end up in many packages of ground beef. Ground beef (like
other ground meats) can also go through several grinding steps at processing
plants and in stores, providing more opportunities for cross-contamination to
occur. And then there’s the way home cooks handle raw ground beef: kneading it
with bare hands to form burger patties or a meatloaf. Unless you’re scrupulous
about washing your hands thoroughly afterward, bacteria can remain and
contaminate everything you touch—from the surfaces in your kitchen to other
foods you are preparing.
“There’s no way to tell by looking at a package of meat or
smelling it whether it has harmful bacteria or not,” says Urvashi Rangan,
Ph.D., executive director of the Center for Food Safety and Sustainability at
Consumer Reports. (Download a PDF of the
center's full report on beef.) “You have to be on guard every time.”
That means keeping any raw meat on your countertop from touching other foods
nearby and cooking ground beef to at least medium, which is 160° F. Eating a
burger that’s rarer can be risky. In one 2014 E. coli outbreak, five of the 12
people who got sick had eaten a burger at one of the locations of an Ohio pub
chain called Bar 145°, which was named for the temperature “of a perfectly
cooked medium-rare burger,” according to the company’s website.
E. coli being grown in a petri dish
Putting Beef to the
Test
Given those concerns about the safety of ground beef,
Consumer Reports decided to test for the prevalence and types of bacteria in
ground beef. We purchased 300 packages—a total of 458 pounds (the equivalent of
1,832 quarter-pounders)—from 103 grocery, big-box, and natural food stores in
26 cities across the country. We bought all types of ground beef:
conventional—the most common type of beef sold, in which cattle are typically
fattened up with grain and soy in feedlots and fed antibiotics and other drugs
to promote growth and prevent disease—as well as beef that was raised in more
sustainable ways, which have important implications for food safety and animal welfare.
At a minimum, sustainably produced beef was raised without antibiotics. Even
better are organic and grass-fed methods. Organic cattle are not given
antibiotics or other drugs, and they are fed organic feed. Grass-fed cattle
usually don’t get antibiotics, and they spend their lives on pasture, not
feedlots.
We analyzed the samples for five common types of bacteria
found on beef—clostridium perfringens, E. coli (including O157 and six other
toxin-producing strains), enterococcus, salmonella, and staphylococcus aureus.
The routine use of antibiotics in farming has contributed to
the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, so once-easy-to-treat infections are
becoming more serious and even deadly. We put the bacteria we found through an
additional round of testing to see whether they were resistant to antibiotics
in the same classes that are commonly used to treat infections in people. Last,
we compared the results of samples from conventionally raised beef with the
sustainably raised beef to see whether there were differences in the presence
of antibiotic-resistant bacteria between the products.
The results were sobering. All 458 pounds of beef we
examined contained bacteria that signified fecal contamination (enterococcus
and/or nontoxin-producing E. coli), which can cause blood or urinary tract
infections. Almost 20 percent contained C. perfringens, a bacteria that causes
almost 1 million cases of food poisoning annually. Ten percent of the samples
had a strain of S. aureus bacteria that can produce a toxin that can make you
sick. That toxin can’t be destroyed—even with proper cooking.
Just 1 percent of our samples contained salmonella. That may
not sound worrisome, but, says Rangan, “extrapolate that to the billions of
pounds of ground beef we eat every year, and that’s a lot of burgers with the
potential to make you sick.” Indeed, salmonella causes an estimated 1.2 million
illnesses and 450 deaths in the U.S. each year.
One of the most significant findings of our research is that
beef from conventionally raised cows was more likely to have bacteria overall,
as well as bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics, than beef from
sustainably raised cows. We found a type of antibiotic-resistant S. aureus
bacteria called MRSA (methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus), which kills
about 11,000 people in the U.S. every year, on three conventional samples (and
none on sustainable samples). And 18 percent of conventional beef samples were
contaminated with superbugs—the dangerous bacteria that are resistant to three
or more classes of antibiotics—compared with just 9 percent of beef from
samples that were sustainably produced. “We know that sustainable methods are
better for the environment and more humane to animals. But our tests also show
that these methods can produce ground beef that poses fewer public health
risks,” Rangan says.
Cows: They Are What
They Eat
The majority of beef (about 97 percent) for sale comes from
“conventionally raised” cattle that begin their lives grazing in grassy
pastures but are then shipped to and packed into feedlots and fed mostly corn
and soybeans for three months to almost a year. The animals may also be given
antibiotics and hormones. That practice is considered to be the most
cost-efficient way to fatten up cattle: It takes less time, labor, and land for
conventionally raised cattle to reach their slaughter weight compared with
those that feed on grass their whole lives. “The high-carbohydrate corn and soy
diet causes cattle to become unnaturally obese creatures that would never exist
in nature,” says farmer Will Harris, who decided 20 years ago to switch to
raising grass-fed cattle at White Oak Pastures, his 2,500-acre fifth-generation
family farm in Bluffton, Ga. “Conventional cattle reach 1,200-plus pounds in 16
to 18 months. On our farm, it takes 20 to 22 months to raise an 1,100-pound
animal, which is what we consider slaughter weight.”
Cows’ digestive systems aren’t designed to easily process
high-starch foods such as corn and soy. Cattle will gain weight faster on a
grain-based diet than on a grass-based one. But it also creates an acidic environment
in the cows’ digestive tract, which can lead to ulcers and infection. Research
shows that this unnatural diet may also cause the cattle to shed more E. coli
in their manure. In addition, cattle may be fed a variety of other substances
to fatten them up. They include candy (such as gummy bears, lemon drops, and
chocolate) to boost their sugar intake and plastic pellets to substitute for
the fiber they would otherwise get from grass. Cattle feed can also contain
parts of slaughtered hogs and chickens that are not used in food production,
and dried manure and litter from chicken barns.
Conventional cattle farmers defend their methods, however.
“If all cattle were grass-fed, we’d have less beef, and it would be less
affordable,” says Mike Apley, Ph.D., a veterinarian, professor at Kansas State
University College of Veterinary Medicine, and chair of the Antibiotic
Resistance Working Group at the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, a trade
group. “Since grass doesn’t grow on pasture year-round in many parts of the
country,” he says, “feedlots evolved to make the most efficient use of land,
water, fuel, labor, and feed.”
Life on the Feedlot
Farmers such as Will Harris are also concerned about the
humaneness of crowding cows into feedlots. “Animals that have never been off
grass are put into a two-story truck and transported for 20-plus hours with no
food, water, or rest,” Harris says. The animals are crowded into pens; the
average feedlot in the U.S. houses about 4,300 head of cattle, according to
Food & Water Watch’s 2015 Factory Farm Nation Report. On some of the
country’s biggest feedlots, the cattle population averages 18,000.
“You always know when you’re approaching a feedlot. The
unmistakable stench hits you first, then you see the hovering fecal dust cloud,
followed by the sight of thousands of cattle packed into pens standing in their
own waste as far as you can see,” says Don Davis, a cattle farmer in Texas and
president of the Grassfed Livestock Alliance. The manure contains potentially
dangerous bacteria that gets on the cattle’s hides and can be transferred to
the meat during slaughter. The conditions also stress the cattle, which makes
them more susceptible to disease, and any illness that develops can quickly
spread from animal to animal.
To control for that, cattle are often fed daily low doses of
antibiotics to prevent disease. According to Apley, cattle in feedlots are
given antibiotics to prevent coccidiosis, a common intestinal infection, but he
notes that those drugs aren’t medically important for people. He also said that
cattle are given an antibiotic called tylosin to ward off liver abscesses. That
drug is in a class of antibiotics that the World Health Organization
categorizes as “critically important” for human medicine. What’s more, in our
tests we found that resistance to classes of antibiotics used to treat people
was widespread. Three-quarters of the samples contained bacteria that were
immune to at least one class of those drugs.
Antibiotics were also given to cattle to promote weight gain
(although just how the drugs do that is unknown), but in 2013 the Food and Drug
Administration issued voluntary guidelines to stop that practice. Previously,
ranchers could buy those drugs over-the-counter and give them to their animals,
but the FDA has proposed that antibiotics be used only under the supervision of
a veterinarian. “That doesn’t mean, though, that antibiotics can’t be used for
disease prevention anymore,” says Jean Halloran, director of Food Policy
Initiatives at Consumer Reports. “Vets can still authorize their use to ‘ensure
animal health,’ so the status quo of feeding healthy animals antibiotics every
day can continue.” Widespread daily and unnecessary use of antibiotics in
healthy animals in turn fuels the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria,
which has become a serious public-health threat.
Meat Monopoly
More than 80 percent of beef produced in the U.S. is
processed by four companies. Cattle can be slaughtered at high-speed rates—as
many as 400 head per hour. Those slaughterhouses use a variety of methods to destroy
bacteria on the carcass after the hide has been removed, such as hot water,
chlorine-based, or lactic acid washes. But when so many cattle are being
processed, sanitary practices may get short shrift. The result is that bacteria
from cattle’s hides or digestive tracts can be transferred to the meat. “USDA
has a presence in these plants to do inspections—though it’s against the
companies’ wishes,” says Patty Lovera, assistant director of Food & Water
Watch. “The economic power of the Big Four gives them a lot of political weight
to push back against USDA inspectors’ efforts to enforce existing rules and to
fight against any tighter safety standards being enacted.” And, she adds, “the
sheer volume of beef that big-company plants crank out means that a quality
control mistake at a single plant can lead to packages of contaminated beef
ending up in stores and restaurants across 20 or 30 states.”
The Better Burger
Starts Here
Cattle can have a healthier (and more humane) upbringing if
they graze in pastures for most—if not all—of their lives. “The most
sustainable beef-production systems don’t rely on any daily drugs, don’t
confine animals, and do allow them to eat a natural diet,” Rangan says. And
what’s good for cows is good for people, too. “Our findings show that more
sustainable can mean safer meat.” That’s why Consumer Reports recommends that
you buy sustainably raised beef whenever possible. Sustainable methods run the
gamut from the very basic ‘raised without antibiotics’ to the most sustainable,
which is grass-fed organic. (Find outwhich labels to
look for when shopping for beef.)
“We suggest that you choose what’s labeled ‘grass-fed
organic beef’ whenever you can,” Rangan says. Aside from the animal welfare and
environmental benefits, grass-fed cattle also need fewer antibiotics or other
drugs to treat disease, and organic standards and many verified grass-fed label
programs prohibit antibiotics. Sustainably raised beef does cost more (learn why grass-fed
beef costs more), but it’s the safest—and most humane—way for
Americans to enjoy our beloved burgers . . . cooked to medium, of course.
We urge you to #BuyBetterBeef and continue the conversation
with us on Twitter, Facebook,Instagram,
and Vine.
How Much Bacteria Is
in Beef?
We tested 300 samples of conventional (181 samples) and more
sustainably produced (119 samples) of raw ground beef purchased at
supermarkets, big-box, and “natural” food stores in 26 metropolitan areas
across the country. We classified beef as being more sustainably produced if it
had one or more of the following characteristics: no antibiotics, organic, or
grass-fed. Here are the percentages of samples in each type that contained each
of the five bacteria we tested for and the samples that contained two or more
types of bacteria.
Where Superbugs Lurk
Superbugs are bacteria that are resistant to three or more
classes of antibiotics, making infections caused by them difficult if not
impossible to treat. In our tests of 300 samples of raw ground beef, we found
that conventional beef was twice as likely to be contaminated with superbugs
than was all types of sustainably produced beef. But the biggest difference we
found was between conventional and grass-fed beef. Just 6 percent of those
samples contained superbugs.
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