Watchdog groups are important for safety of products, including food products. And I think we understand that there will be a certain amount of spin used to hype up the call to action. The latest is from a group called U.S. PIRG. They stretch the math a good bit and miss the important underlying detail.
Statement
"There has been a 10-percent increase in food recalls overall between 2013 and 2018."
Comment
This does not mean our food is less safe, but rather, our surveillance, detection, and tracking has improved dramatically. Our ability to find and link contamination events through networks linked to CDC and our use of whole genome sequencing.
Statement
"Recalls of meat and poultry alone increased by 83 percent over the last five years."
Comment
But if you look at the types of recalls that we are seeing, many recalls logged in this period are related to foreign objects. USDA in conjunction with the meat industry has done a tremendous job in reducing serious outbreaks related to E. coli and Listeria.
Statement
"Karthikeyan cited the March 2018 romaine lettuce recall from Yuma, Arizona that killed five people and made more than 200 sick due to an outbreak of E.coli."
“A simple solution to this, which would have likely prevented the outbreak, would be to set public health limits on how much dangerous E. coli can be in water on produce farms,” Karthikeyan said.
Comment
This is not an easy fix. If it were easy, it would have been fixed. We understand that contaminated irrigation water is a critical factor, but keeping small levels of contaminants out of miles and miles of surface water is just not easy.
Statement
“These recalls are a warning to everyone that something is rotten in our fields and our slaughterhouses and government agencies need to make sure that the food that reaches people’s plates are safe.”
Comment
This statement is over the top. The issues we face from from contaminants that are naturally present...not something rotten. Animals of all types - cows, birds, geckos - have been associated with pathogens such as Salmonella for as long as those species have existed. So thier solution - "Prevent the sale of Salmonella-contaminated meats" is just not going to simply happen without changing the fundamental properties of the products we eat. You are not going to have pasture-raised beef with minimal chemical added that is going to be free from Salmonella.
Statement
"We’re calling on the USDA to stop allowing the sale of meat that testing reveals is contaminated with dangerous, antibiotic-resistant Salmonella."
Comment
You cannot test your way to safety. Prevention is key and looking at ways to reduce levels of contamination is important, just as it is to make sure consumers who handle and prepare foods do it correctly.
The group uses the CDC estimate as a goalpost - "The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 1 in 6 people in the U.S. get foodborne illness with 128,000 individuals hospitalized and 3,000 dying every year." and suggests these number have to improve. This number is a calculated guess at best. The easiest way to improve these numbers is to give them a different statistician.
We get it...we need to improve our system. But this report looks like it was prepared by junior high school students without a real understanding of the issues and can be considered an insult to those who work everyday to our food safe.
You can find the full report here -
LINK.
Philadelphia Tribune
http://www.phillytrib.com/news/local_news/watchdog-agency-report-highlights-flaws-in-nation-s-food-safety/article_ca21735e-2ca1-5a1d-811e-bfb06ab309b1.html
Watchdog agency report highlights flaws in nation’s food safety system
Ayana Jones Tribune Staff Writer
January 17, 2019