Chick-fil-A Drops ‘No Antibiotics’ Pledge on Chicken, Citing Supply
March 27, 2024 | 1 min to read
Chick-fil-A is revising its antibiotic policy by abandoning the strict “no antibiotics ever” pledge established in 2019. The fast-food chain aims to uphold the supply of high-quality chicken by permitting the use of some antibiotics, though it will exclude those crucial to human medicine. This change is seen as a response to balancing quality and health concerns regarding antibiotic resistance linked to livestock usage.
Chick-fil-A is dropping its pledge to serve chicken with “no antibiotics ever” and will instead adopt a less-stringent standard that allows the use of some antibiotics. The complete antibiotic ban, which the chain put in place in 2019, was intended to help lessen humans’ antibiotic resistance, which has been partially blamed on the widespread use of the drugs in livestock.
The fast-growing chicken chain recently announced that it was easing its rules to “maintain the supply of high-quality chicken you expect from us.”
The new standard will instead allow the company to use chickens that have been treated with antibiotics, although not those drugs “that are important to human medicine and commonly used to treat people.”
To read the rest of the story, please go to: The Washington Post