CDC Finds Steep Increase In Allergies To Red Meat

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by Populisty, Activist Post:

The CDC reported today that as many as 450,000 people in the United States might have been affected by a red-meat allergy called alpha-gal syndrome associated with tick bites. It has some Internet sleuths wondering if it is part of a secret agenda to to fight climate change.

According to two recent reports, between 2010 and 2022, there were more than 110,000 suspected cases of alpha-gal syndrome identified. The cases has increased every year. However, the CDC suspects the majority of cases go unreported and untested and estimate the number to be much higher.

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Links to CDC reports:

– Geographic Distribution of Suspected Alpha-gal Syndrome Cases — United States, January 2017–December 2022
– Health Care Provider Knowledge Regarding Alpha-gal Syndrome — United States, March–May 2022

“Alpha-gal is a sugar found in meat from mammals (pork, beef, rabbit, lamb, venison, etc.) and products made from mammals (e.g., gelatin, cow’s milk, milk products, some pharmaceuticals),” the release states. “AGS is a serious allergic condition some people experience after they consume food or products containing alpha-gal.”

The CDC says growing evidence suggests that AGS is primarily associated with the bite of a Lone Star tick in the United States, but other kinds of ticks have not been ruled out. Localities in the Southern, Midwestern, and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States identified more people who tested positive.

See map below for the concentration of confirmed cases:

This spike in red-meat allergies comes after scientists have suggested deliberately spreading alpha-gal to humans in order to reduce climate change. The theory is that cattle contribute to global warming; therefore, if fewer people ate meat it would help the planet cool down.

S. Matthew Liao from the NYU School of Global Public Health gave a TED talk in 2013 suggesting exactly this scenario:

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