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Media Coverage

''Foodborne Illnesses Not Diminishing, CDC Finds''


  • Jul 30, 2012
  • The Washington Post
  • Dina ElBoghdady
  • Project: Food Safety

"Little progress has been made in combating many types of food-borne illnesses in recent years, according to new federal data, an outcome that food safety advocates say underscores the need to put into place the landmark food-safety bill signed by President Obama more than a year ago."

"The most recent figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that the rates of infections linked to four out of five key pathogens it tracks — salmonella, vibrio, campylobacter and listeria — remained relatively steady or increased from 2007 through 2011. The exception is a strain of E. coli, which has been tied to fewer illnesses in the same time frame."

...

"The results frustrated consumer advocates, who along with industry groups pushed for passage of the Food Safety Modernization Act, which empowers the Food and Drug Administration to prevent food-borne illnesses instead of simply reacting to them. Obama signed the legislation in January 2011 after a string of food-borne outbreaks shook consumer confidence in the nation’s food supply."

"But the administration has not met the deadlines for releasing draft rules needed to implement key provisions of the law, including one that would mandate that food imports meet the same safety standards as food produced domestically."

“Everyone was hoping that this new food safety law would be in place and we’d start seeing improvements by now,” said Erik Olson, a director at the Pew Health Group. “What these CDC numbers show is that unless new protections are put into place, millions of Americans are going to continue to get sick from contaminated food.”

Full article

Date added:
Jul 30, 2012
Project:
Food Safety
Topic:
Food Safety
Related Expert:
Erik Olson

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