Contamination
poses challenge for investigators and regulators
Newswise,
June 24, 2016 — An ongoing incident of Listeria contamination linked to frozen vegetables is
causing illnesses across state and national lines. At least 350 products use
the vegetables, which are distributed to retailers in all 50 states and four
Canadian provinces.
Ingredient-driven
outbreaks make for complex investigations. When a single contaminated
ingredient is included in hundreds or even thousands of products, the potential
for illness increases exponentially.
It becomes extremely challenging to identify
the contaminated food. Other ingredient-driven outbreaks that have occurred in
recent years include one linked to pine nuts that were used in pesto, salads, and baked
goods, and another associated with sunflower
seeds found in a variety of trail mixes.
In
fact, an ingredient-driven outbreak powered enactment of the FDA Food Safety
Modernization Act (FSMA), the first major overhaul of the U.S. food system in
70 years.
In 2009, Salmonella-contaminated peanut butter
and peanut products sickened more than 700 people and led to nine deaths.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 3,000
peanut products—including crackers, cookies, and granola bars produced by a
variety of companies—may have been made with the contaminated ingredients
produced by the Peanut Corporation of America (PCA).
Illnesses
spread throughout the country as investigators raced to identify the source of
contamination. It took months to pinpoint the tainted products, and to then
track down the number of items, retailers, and distributors involved.
Meanwhile, people kept getting sick.
The PCA
outbreak underscored the importance of a prevention-based approach to foodborne
contamination, codified in FSMA. The law requires food manufacturers to take
proactive steps to prevent food safety problems. Companies that supply food
ingredients must adhere to adequate food safety practices.
Manufacturers
must develop safety plans for their processing facilities, which identify
possible points of contamination and steps to mitigate them, and monitor the
effectiveness of those efforts. When problems arise, food processors must work
diligently to correct them.
The
investigation into contaminated frozen vegetables is ongoing, with both
manufacturers and regulators working to protect consumers from further
illnesses. The new prevention-based requirements for food-processing facilities
will begin to go into effect in September 2016.
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