“Biggest Wannabe” award
goes to Wendy’s; McDonald’s gets “Biggest Moover”
Consumer Reports news
release
From NRDC |
This is a stark contrast to the stunning antibiotic success story that has unfolded across the chicken industry in the past decade, driven in large part by meaningful policies adopted by fast food companies.
Leading public health
experts have long warned that curbing overuse of these drugs in livestock is
essential to combating the growing epidemic of antibiotic-resistant infections
in people and animals. In the absence of federal action, leadership in the
marketplace is critical to solving this problem.
“These companies buy enormous amounts of meat—they have the power and the responsibility to move the needle on antibiotics,” said Lena Brook, Food Campaigns Director with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).
“Fast food companies helped transform practices in the chicken industry. Now they need to do it again for beef. Half-hearted efforts—like Wendy’s—won’t be enough. To keep these drugs working when sick people and animals need them, we need bold action before it’s too late.”
It was produced by NRDC, the Antibiotic Resistance Action Center at Milken Institute School of Public Health at the George Washington University, Consumer Reports, Food Animal Concerns Trust, U.S. PIRG Education Fund and Center for Food Safety.
SUPERLATIVES
For the first time this
year the groups recognized companies for significant progress, leadership and foot-dragging
with the following superlatives:
BIGGEST WANNABE:
Wendy’s. The nation’s
third-largest burger chain has made only a token gesture toward addressing the
problem in its beef supply chain. It has cut the use of just one of more than
two dozen medically important antibiotics approved for use in the cattle
industry by just 20%, and in just 30% of its beef supply.
BIGGEST MOOVER: McDonald’s. The largest beef
purchaser in the world, McDonald’s had no policy for antibiotics use in beef
until last December when it committed to curtailing routine medically important
antibiotic use across its vast global supply chain and set concrete reduction
targets by the end of 2020.
EARLY LEADERS: Chipotle
and Panera. These were the first
two major national chains to address antibiotics in their meat supplies. Both
currently serve only beef raised without the routine use of antibiotics.
BEST BURGER JOINTS: BurgerFi and Shake Shack. While
these restaurants were not graded in this year’s report because they are not
among the overall top restaurant chains in the country, they earned this
recognition for being the two largest U.S. burger chains
already implementing strong policies. These companies exclusively serve
responsibly raised beef across all of their restaurants. They both also posted
higher year-over-years sales from 2017 to 2018, confirming better beef is a win
for the bottom line.
“We’re seeing mostly
baby steps when it comes to reducing the massive overuse of antibiotics in the
beef industry. When you consider that our ability to treat life-threatening
infections is at stake, it’s clear we need to take big leaps forward,” said
Matt Wellington, Antibiotics Campaign Director with the U.S. PIRG Education
Fund. “Major beef buyers like Wendy’s can help accelerate the shift away from
using our life-saving medicines as a crutch for industrial beef production.”
GRADES
The report also graded
the top fast food restaurants nationwide on the antibiotic use policies and
practices behind the beef served in their restaurants.
Top performers were
Chipotle (A) and Panera (A-), which earned grades in the “A” range for the
fifth year in a row.
They were followed by
McDonald’s (C) and Subway (C). Like McDonald’s, Subway has strong policies on
the books, but has yet to begin implementing them.
Wendy’s (D+) earned a
grade in the “D” range for the second year in a row. Meanwhile, Taco Bell
received a “D” for taking a minor step in the right direction with a commitment
to reduce medically important antibiotics by 25% by 2025.
The remaining chains
graded on the scorecard received an “F” because they have not established
policies restricting antibiotic use in their beef supply chains: Arby’s,
Applebee’s, Buffalo Wild Wings, Burger King, Chili’s, Dairy Queen, Domino’s
Pizza, IHOP, Jack in the Box, Little Caesar’s, Olive Garden, Panda Express,
Pizza Hut, Sonic and Starbucks.
“Most fast food chains
continue to rely on beef suppliers that waste these life-saving medications on
cows that are not sick,” said Meg Bohne, Associate Director of Campaigns at
Consumer Reports.
“By adopting more responsible antibiotics policies for beef, these restaurants can help end the misuse of these critically important drugs.”
“By adopting more responsible antibiotics policies for beef, these restaurants can help end the misuse of these critically important drugs.”
Background
A new estimate puts the
death toll from antibiotic-resistant infections in the U.S. at more than
160,000 deaths a year, which would make it the 4th leading cause of death in
the country.
Nearly two-thirds of
antibiotics that are important for human medicine are currently sold for use in
livestock, not people. The cattle industry consumes more than any other sector.
These drugs are
routinely given to healthy cattle as poor compensation for inappropriate diets
and the stressful, crowded and unsanitary conditions on industrial feedlots.
This practice hastens the spread of antibiotic resistance in bacteria and
increases the risk of drug-resistant infections in people.
“Much antibiotic use in
the beef industry is the result of unhealthy choices by cattle feeders,” said
Steve Roach, Food Safety Program Director at Food Animal Concerns Trust. “They
feed inappropriate high-energy diets and fail to prepare calves for the
transition from pasture to feedlot. Feedlots then feed routine antibiotics to
manage the problems this causes.”
In contrast to beef, the
vast majority (92%) of chicken
sold in the U.S. last year was produced without the use of antibiotics
considered medically important by the FDA. Much of the positive change in
chicken production has happened in the past five years. The fast food
industry—under pressure from consumers and the groups behind the Chain Reaction
scorecard—has been a driving force behind that progress.
“Our federal government
is not working at a pace equal to the crisis we are facing from antibiotic
resistance,” said Laura Rogers, managing director of the Antibiotic Resistance
Action Center at Milken Institute School of Public Health at the George
Washington University. “So we must look to the marketplace for leadership.
We’ve seen great progress on chicken, we need leadership now in the other meat
sectors.”
A 2018 Consumer Reports
nationally representative survey of 1,014 adults found that 78% of respondents
agreed that meat producers should stop giving antibiotics to animals that
aren’t sick. Fifty-nine percent said they would be more likely to eat at a
restaurant that serves meat raised without antibiotics.
“That these restaurants
have such a wide range of policies around sourcing meat raised with medically
important antibiotics underscores the need for government regulation to mandate
reductions in antibiotic use for the industry writ large,” said Jaydee Hanson,
Policy Director at the Center for Food Safety. “If the largest chains keep
dragging their feet, the antibiotics crisis will only worsen.”