Arab Times

Foodborne illness more common than thought

48 mn cases reported annually in US

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SEATTLE, Nov 11, (AP): Foodborne illnesses like the E. coli outbreak linked to Chipotle restaurant­s in the Northwest are more common than the public realizes, experts say, with most instances never making the news.

About 48 million cases of foodborne disease occur in the US annually, sending about 105,000 people to the hospital and resulting in 2,000 deaths, according to data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s about 1 in 7 people in the country getting sick from food every year.

Many of these illnesses involve people eating at home, but even restaurant-related outbreaks are fairly common, said Dr. Paul Cieslak, medical director for communicab­le diseases at Oregon’s state health agency.

“Screw-ups can occur in any kitchen, but obviously it’s more dramatic when it occurs in a kitchen that serves 5,000 people,” said Cieslak, who has helped investigat­e the E. coli outbreak that sickened about 45 people in Washington state and Oregon.

There are things people can do to ward off foodborne illnesses: Wash your hands before making or eating food, avoid undercooke­d hamburger or raw shellfish, be careful about crossconta­mination of raw meat, wash produce thoroughly, and steer clear of unpasteuri­zed milk or juice.

But it’s impossible to avoid all bacteria on food, Cieslak says. For example, if lettuce or berries are contaminat­ed with E. coli, it’s very difficult to wash them well enough to get to every nook and cranny where the bacteria are hiding.

“When you go to a restaurant, let’s face it — you’re kind of at the mercy of what’s going on in the kitchen,” he said.

Most reports of potential food-related illnesses pose no ongoing threat, so local health department­s do not report them to the public, according to Dr. Jeff Duchin, health officer for Seattle and King County Public Health.

Of the more than 1,000 potential cases each year in the county that includes Seattle, only a handful are confirmed as food-related outbreaks. When those confirmed cases pose an ongoing risk to the public, an announceme­nt is made.

Duchin said that’s why the most recent Chipotle-related outbreak attracted widespread media attention, while a smaller case — five people sick from eating at one Seattle Chipotle restaurant in July — was not reported.

The July outbreak had ended by the time the health department investigat­ed, and officials found no evidence of an ongoing problem that people needed to know about, said Duchin, who noted the two cases involved different E. coli strains.

A Seattle attorney who specialize­s in food-safety cases and whose daughter was a frequent customer of the Chipotle in the earlier case was upset when he heard about that outbreak.

“It just drives me nuts,” said Bill Marler, who built his national reputation with the 1993 E. coli outbreak at Seattle Jack in the Box restaurant­s. “This is the kind of thing that tears apart people’s belief that government can actually do stuff correctly and good.”

Government regulation­s and restaurant and farm inspection­s prevent some people from getting sick, but critics say more must be done to prevent foodborne illness.

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