-Caveat Lector-

March 18, 2001

Contaminated Food Makes Millions Ill Despite Advances

<http://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/18/health/18FOOD.html>

By GREG WINTER

Tapeworm and botulism have been all but eradicated in this country, and new
technologies from freeze-drying to irradiation have been developed to make
food safer. But because of changing eating habits and more choices of
foods, Americans may be more likely to get sick from what they eat today
than they were half a century ago.
The frequency of serious gastrointestinal illness, a common gauge of food
poisoning, is 34 percent above what it was in 1948, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Not all scientists agree with
that conclusion  some say that food poisoning is as common as in the
immediate postwar years, but not necessarily more so, yet there is no doubt
about the scale of the problem.
Every year, the agency says, 5,000 deaths, 325,000 hospitalizations and 76
million illnesses are caused by food poisoning.
One of those sickened was Taylor Lake Holt, a cheerful 7-year-old boy from
Anchorage. Taylor, a cancer patient who had just ended a yearlong ordeal
with chemotherapy in 1999, celebrated with a smoothie made with
unpasteurized Sun Orchard orange juice. Within a day, he had to be rushed
back to the hospital, where it took him four more days to recover.
The juice, it turned out, contained salmonella. The company later explained
that it had met rising demand by bringing from Mexico a tanker truck of
unpasteurized orange juice, chilled with contaminated ice. The company and
regulators agree that this probably caused an outbreak that infected more
than 400 people. One elderly man died.
Why, in an age of technologies that protect food, is food poisoning at
least as common as it was a half- century ago?
For one thing, people are eating more fresh fruits and vegetables without
cooking them, increasing the chance of infection through bacteria or
viruses. For another, people are eating more precooked foods, like seafood
salads and deli meats, which are more dangerous than traditional sit-down
meals served right off the stove or out of the oven.
What is more, the variety of foods available has expanded considerably
faster than the government's ability to inspect them. In the last decade,
grocery stores have doubled the number of items they stock, from every
corner of the world, some carrying new organisms that scientists still
cannot identify, much less treat.
In fact, the amount of contaminated food that reaches store shelves only to
be recalled for posing health risks has reached its highest level in more
than a decade.
"We do have a real problem," said Joe Levitt, food safety director for the
Food and Drug Administration.
Amid the proliferation of foods, the F.D.A.'s resources to scrutinize them
have scarcely changed, often making consumers the first to test a product's
safety. A healthy person can withstand most infections, but older people
have weaker immune systems and the population is aging, leading many
scientists to worry that more Americans are becoming more susceptible to
food-borne illness.
"We are the canaries in the coal mines," said Dickson Despommier, a
professor at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University.
"The moment someone gets sick, we say,  'Don't eat that food.' It's a
miracle that the system doesn't break down more."
Unappealing though they may be, many contaminated products recalled last
year, from batches of moldy Gatorade to ammonia-tainted ice cream, do not
pose serious threats to health, manufacturers say. When outbreaks do occur,
the food industry adds, better surveillance has quickened the ability to
track down the cause, helping to make the nation's food supply, already the
safest in the world, more trustworthy than ever.
And the industry says it has made much progress in making food safer. In
fact, the illnesses caused by contaminated juice came in spite of stringent
new F.D.A. rules for the juice industry in the wake of earlier
outbreaks. And Sun Orchard, an Arizona company, had already increased
safety by steam-cleaning oranges and bathing them in chlorine to kill bacteria.
Although much of the fear surrounding food safety focuses on meat and
poultry, especially beef, the General Accounting Office estimates that 85
percent of food poisoning comes from the fruits, vegetables, seafood and
cheeses that are regulated by the F.D.A. and claim a larger share of the
American diet each year. And poisoning from such foods can be every bit as
deadly as that from meat and poultry.
Still, the F.D.A. has less than a tenth of the inspectors of the Department
of Agriculture, which regulates the meat and poultry industry. So while
U.S.D.A.  inspectors examine meat before it gets to grocery freezers, the
F.D.A. must increasingly rely on the companies it regulates to keep their
factories clean and their products safe.
Now, with slightly more than 400 inspectors to ferret out violations in
57,000 plants across the nation, the F.D.A. inspects food manufacturers
about once every eight years. Some health officials, consumer advocates and
epidemiologists doubt that without more of a presence the F.D.A. can catch
contaminated food at the source and prevent it from getting into the food
supply.
"The F.D.A. is simply going from crisis to crisis and attempting to put out
the fires," said Caroline Smith DeWaal, food safety director for the Center
for Science in the Public Interest, a nonprofit group.
The critics have some evidence. Last year, recalls of F.D.A.-regulated
products rose to 315  the most since the mid-1980's and 36 percent above
the average since the agency began keeping track 15 years ago. In every
instance, the food had already made its way to store shelves before any
contamination was discovered, either by regulators or by manufacturers, and
often remained there for months.
"Any reasonable person would worry about it," said George Grob, deputy
inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services, which
oversees the F.D.A. "If the inspection process worked really well, there
would be fewer recalls.  That's why you do inspections: to prevent any
contamination from occurring in the first place."
In contrast with its strict supervision of blood banks or mammography
centers, the F.D.A. is not required to visit food plants regularly. And as
the agency's workload has increased faster than its budget, particularly in
the realm of approving new drugs, food safety inspections have fallen to
about a third of what they were in the 1980's.
"The core mission of the agency, which has been to inspect food and ensure
its safety, has eroded," said one senior Health and Human Services official.
With imported foods, the F.D.A. is at a particular disadvantage. In the
last four years alone, the number of foreign food items increased by 50
percent, from 2.7 million items in 1997 to 4.1 million last year.
The responsibility of examining that avalanche falls to a cadre of just 113
federal import inspectors, and the force has grown by only 3 workers since
1997. As a result, the F.D.A. inspects less than 1 percent of all imported
foods, according to the General Accounting Office.
It is all but inevitable, health officials say, that at least some of those
imports will be contaminated. Last April, a California bean sprout grower,
Pacific Coast Sprout Farms, shipped in seeds from China and Australia.
Germinated in warehouse- sized shelters, the sprouts caused a salmonella
outbreak from Oregon to Massachusetts. At least 67 people fell ill, 17 of
whom sought treatment in hospitals.
Not only were the imported seeds contaminated, health officials say, but
the company grew them using only a tenth of the amount of cleansing agent
recommended by the F.D.A. And although the company found evidence of
contamination before sending the sprouts to market, it did not order a
recall until after an outbreak had spread.
The C.D.C. now says that food is responsible for twice the number of
illnesses in the United States as scientists thought just seven years ago.
Many of the illnesses stem from improper handling of food, either by
kitchen workers or consumers themselves, but some health officials say this
has always been the case and, if anything, treatment of food has improved
over the years.
At least 80 percent of food-related illnesses are caused by viruses or
other pathogens that scientists cannot even identify. As for the diseases
researchers do know, while a number of common ailments like salmonella have
tapered off in recent years, other, more serious illnesses appear to be on
the rise. Cases of E. coli infection, for example, have more than doubled
in the last five years, to 4,341 in 2000 from 1,667 in 1995, although some
of the increase may be a result of better reporting, scientists say.
The food industry agrees that better scrutiny is needed, because not all
companies can afford to run tests in their factories. "Right or wrong, the
vast majority of foods are not required to be tested for pathogens," said
C. Thomas Leitzke, director of inspections for the Wisconsin health
department. "The plants are not required to do it, and in most cases don't."
Many health officials worry that as consolidation transforms the food
industry from countless local farms to a handful of giant corporations that
ship their products worldwide, the reach of contaminated food is expanding,
magnifying problems when they do occur.
"Even if you doubled the number of inspectors, you still only look at a
small percentage of the food," said Dr. Dennis Lang, infectious disease
officer at the National Institutes of Health. "But the mere promise that it
might be inspected makes people take notice. They'll make sure their plant
is clean."

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to