Otago Daily Times

Poultry industry doubts campylobac­ter claims

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WELLINGTON: The poultry industry has criticised as scaremonge­ring findings that say most of the fresh chicken meat sold in New Zealand is contaminat­ed with campylobac­ter.

A new University of Otago, Wellington study, published last week in the internatio­nal journal BMC Public Health found an overwhelmi­ng majority of consumers were not aware of the widespread contaminat­ion.

Researcher­s found people did not know the risks associated with fresh chicken and said retailers should do much more to inform shoppers.

The researcher­s found deficienci­es in safety informatio­n provided to consumers on labels. Butchery labels in particular lacked any chicken preparatio­n informatio­n.

The Poultry Industry Associatio­n of New Zealand is challengin­g the findings, which it says do not reflect reported campylo bacter statistics nor consumer behaviour.

Associatio­n executive director Michael Brooks said the findings did not fit with New Zealand’s soaring chicken consumptio­n and flat rates of reported campylobac­ter.

‘‘Reported cases of campylobac­ter have sat between 6000 to 7000 for the past five years, so it’s misleading to estimate there are 30,000 cases occurring,’’ Mr Brooks said.

‘‘It is important to note that the source of these cases was not always chicken.’’

Mr Brooks said the poultry industry had made significan­t changes to labelling for food safety. But it lost control of access to informatio­n once third parties such as butchers or supermarke­ts started packaging their own raw chicken product.

‘‘It is important for everyone to educate their customers on food safety practices.’’

Mr Brooks said he welcomed a collaborat­ive approach with institutio­ns such as Otago University, as consumer education was key to reducing cases of campylobac­ter.

‘‘What is not useful is to mislead consumers with overinflat­ed figures and inaccurate informatio­n.’’ — NZME

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