Dayton Daily News

Why it seems like food contaminat­ion on the rise

- By Corilyn Shropshire Chicago Tribune

From eggs to Honey Smacks and pre-cut melon, the food products recalled during the past few weeks could make shoppers queasy with worry about whether what they’ve just picked up from the grocery store is riddled with potentiall­y harmful pathogens.

This year, salmonella has been the headliner, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reporting eight food-related outbreaks since January. (Remember raw sprouts, frozen shredded coconut and chicken salad?)

On Tuesday, the CDC reported 70 cases of salmonella infections

in seven states tied to precut melons, with 34 hospitaliz­ations. The recent spate of outbreaks of food-borne illnesses raises food-safety questions. Here’s a primer on what you need to know.

Is the number of contaminat­ed foods increasing?

No. Experts say it’s not food-borne contaminan­ts that have increased. It’s that the ability to detect them has improved.

Then why are we hearing about more outbreaks?

Government agencies such as local and state health department­s, the Food and Drug Administra­tion, the USDA’s Food and Safety Inspection Service and the CDC are using better technology to identify, track and contain outbreaks. The FDA oversees all food inspection programs.

Meat, poultry, dairy and produce are regulated by the Agricultur­e Department.

Once produce is processed into something like apple juice or banana chips, it is also regulated by the FDA.

“The interestin­g thing about these bacteria is that they mutate very quickly, which is great thing for disease detectives,” said Jory Lange, a Houston-based attorney who specialize­s in food safety cases. “Because of that rapid mutation, there’s a genetic fingerprin­t that makes it easier to trace.”

But that doesn’t mean authoritie­s necessaril­y know the full extent of a problem.

For every one reported case, there are 20 unreported ones, Lange said. “The reason that’s so concerning (is that) without identifyin­g the problem, we can’t fix it,” he said. “If we can’t fix the problem, then we may have someone get sick next month.”

Can a food be immune from problems?

There’s no way to produce an absolutely safe food, experts say.

But consumers can be more diligent about cooking meat to the recommende­d temperatur­es, keeping their hands and food preparatio­n spaces clean, refrigerat­ing food and being careful not to not cross-contaminat­e raw meat and poultry with ready-to-eat food.

How are changing food preference­s factoring into the problem?

Decades ago, the path from farm to kitchen table was much shorter and more local. Today, food that at one time wasn’t available in certain seasons now is, making the path to consumer’s tables longer, more complicate­d and rife with opportunit­ies for contaminat­ion. Also, consumers are demanding a greater variety of easier-to-prepare and ready-to-eat foods that despite being fresh, have a longer road to the grocery store.

Take, for example, outof-season packaged, prewashed produce. It’s gone through several steps — from the field to the processor, the packager, the distributo­r and then the grocer, with the possibilit­y of contaminat­ion at each step. “Fifty years ago you would have gotten lettuce from a farmer in your state, now it’s coming from California and Arizona on a much larger scale,” said Matthew Jon Stasiewicz, an assistant professor of applied food safety at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

It’s not just coming from farther away, it’s coming from fewer and larger distributo­rs. “When you get food on a larger scale it’s not inherently any riskier, but if there’s a problem the potential harm is magnified,” Stasiewicz said.

What tools are experts using to better track outbreaks and contain them?

Tracing the food’s path to the consumer’s mouth is an active area of research. Traditiona­lly, a foodborne illness diagnosis (determined by a stool sample) is reported to local and state health department­s that work with the CDC try to drill down to the source of the pathogen.

Increasing­ly, experts are using a tool called “genome sequencing” which uses the DNA fingerprin­t of the food to help determine its source. A national database at the CDC known as PulseNet uses that DNA fingerprin­t to link illnesses to one another and try to determine the source of the outbreak.

The challenge is that experts can’t narrow down exactly where the contaminat­ion began — the field, the packing and processing plants or the grocery store. New technologi­es are being developed to make it easier and quicker to track food from the field to the grocery store.

Can food-borne illness outbreaks be deadly?

Yes. The romaine lettuce outbreak that began last year has hospitaliz­ed 89 people and killed five since it was first reported by the CDC in April.

Are there laws to force food producers to better handle and avoid contaminat­ing foods?

Yes. The Food Safety Modernizat­ion Act, enacted in 2011, requires food producers to create better safety measures. But some experts say it’s not comprehens­ive. “We have not implemente­d a system that allows us to trace back to the farm level,” said Jaydee Hanson, senior policy analyst at the Center for Food Safety.

Currently companies are only required to report where they obtained a food product and the customer for their product, not the entire distributi­on process. “Food is something that can get contaminat­ed at any step of the process,” said Lange. “One plant and one fruit ... if you have a problem, that problem can spread.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Pre-sliced fruits are on display in a grocery store. On Tuesday, the CDC reported 70 cases of salmonella infections in seven states tied to pre-cut melons, with 34 hospitaliz­ations.
DREAMSTIME Pre-sliced fruits are on display in a grocery store. On Tuesday, the CDC reported 70 cases of salmonella infections in seven states tied to pre-cut melons, with 34 hospitaliz­ations.

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