
COK Talks with Michael Greger, M.D.
Dr. Michael Greger is an internationally recognized lecturer who has presented at the Conference on World Affairs,
the National Institutes of Health, and the Bird Flu Summit, among countless other symposia and institutions. He
was also invited as an expert witness in defense of Oprah Winfrey at the infamous “meat defamation”
trial. Dr. Greger is a graduate of the Cornell University School of Agriculture and the Tufts University School
of Medicine and is the director of public health and animal agriculture at The Humane Society of the United States.
Q:
Bird flu is a common avian virus in nature that typically poses no significant threat to
humans. Why is H5N1 so alarming to experts worldwide?
A:
The last human pandemic triggered by a bird flulike virus killed 50 million people around the world and
became the worst plague in human history. The pandemic virus of 1918 killed less than 5% of its human
victims; the current mutant strain of avian influenza spreading out of Asia—H5N1—has officially
killed over 50%. Currently, with the unprecedented spread of this unprecedented virus, leading public health
authorities understandably fear it could spark a global outbreak of disease that kills millions of people.
Q:
In your new book, Bird Flu: A Virus of Our Own Hatching, you explain the role that factory
farming plays in the mutation and spread of bird flu strains. Can you provide a brief overview?
A:
Bird flu viruses have existed harmlessly for millions of years, harmless to both birds and people.
Placed into extreme conditions, though, some of these viruses can mutate into a dangerous, so-called
highly pathogenic forms. The trenches of WWI, for example, may have led to the pandemic of
1918. Millions of soldiers were crowded together in stressful, unhygienic conditions. From the point of
view of bird flu viruses, these same trench warfare conditions exist today in every industrial chicken
and egg operation—confined, crowded, stressed, but by the billions not just millions. Cramming tens of
thousands of chickens into filthy football-field sized sheds to lie beak to beak in their own waste sets up a
veritable breeding ground for disease.
Q:
What is the U.S. government doing to address the health threats posed by factory farms?
A:
The American Public Health Association has publicly called for a moratorium on building new animal
factories in the United States to protect the health of local communities. With the emergence of viruses
like H5N1, though, industrial animal agriculture has increasingly become a global public health menace.
Unfortunately the level of undue agribusiness influence on public policy has made substantive changes
difficult on a national level. Sadly, it may take a pandemic before society wakes up to the true cost of
cheap chicken.
Q:
What is the best step each of us can take to combat bird flu?
A:
We need to heed the advice of the United Nations and to fight the role of what they call “factory
farming” in the emergence and spread of dangerous bird flu viruses. It is not worth risking the lives of
millions of people for the sake of inexpensive eggs and meat.
Q:
Is there anything else you’d like to add?
A:
The entire book is available for free, full-text online at BirdFluBook.org.
Bird Flu: A Virus of our Own Hatching
By Dr. Michael Greger
2006, Lantern Books
Visit BirdFluBook.org to order a copy or read the full-text online.
Excerpts from book:
The first ingredient in the recipe to potentially increase the virulence of bird flu is overcrowding.
In modern broiler production, 20,000 to 30,000 day-old chicks are placed on
the floor atop coarse wood shavings or other litter material in an otherwise barren shed.
As they grow bigger, rapidly reaching slaughter-weight, the crowding grows more and
more intensive.
In the United States, the average numbers of animals on chicken, pig, and cattle operations
approximately doubled between 1978 and 1992.This increasing population density seems
to be playing a key role in triggering emerging epidemics. In terms of disease control,
according to the FAO, “[t]he critical issue is the keeping [of] more and more animals in
smaller and smaller spaces....” The unnaturally high concentration of animals confined
indoors in a limited airspace producing enormous quantities of manure provides, from a
microbiologist’s perspective, “ideal conditions for infectious diseases.”
Previous Page | Contents | Next Page
|