OVERVIEW OF CURRENT
FOOD SAFETY ISSUES
Objectives
To provide information on:
- Current food safety issues
- Reasons for increased
incidents of foodborne illness
Introduction
Each year in the United States alone, it is estimated that more than
33 million people become ill as a direct result of foodborne illness.
More than 9,000 people die. The cost in lost wages, insurance claims
and medical bills amounts to between $7.7 and $23 billion a year. Recently,
food safety issues have gained national attention. They have been the
subject of numerous articles in the media, including themes for TV sitcoms.
Family and Consumer Sciences labs and classes provide a unique forum
for students to develop an understanding of food safety principles and
their application.
Current Food Safety Issues
According to Dr. Jane Collins, who spoke at the March 1997 "Emerging
Foodborne Pathogens Implication and Control" conference in Alexandra,
Virginia, the most serious food safety problem in the United States
is foodborne illness of microbial origin. The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) reports (1996) that 79% of the outbreaks between
1987 and 1992 were a direct result of microbial contamination. This
opinion is also shared by scientists and regulatory officials. The
medical
community and the food industry is becoming increasingly concerned
because some microbes have demonstrated resistance to methods of food
preparation
and storage, and to antibiotics. However, consumers rarely consider
their own food safety practices as a hazard. They continue to view
the
use and misuse of agricultural chemicals, pesticides and animal drugs
as the major concern (Jones, 1992). The results of a 1996 American
Meat
Institute study (see Teacher Information Sheet #5) indicated that Americans
appear to be more interested in convenience and saving time than in
proper food handling and preparation (Collins, 1997).
The level of consumer interest about any food safety issue is directly
related to the level of attention the issue is given by print and voice
media (Jones, 1992). A survey conducted in April, 1997 by Creswell,
Munsell, Fultz & Zirbel-Public Relations Company (CMF&Z), suggests
the level of concern about a food safety issue is driven largely by
food safety scares. For the past four years, CMF&Z has conducted
a nationwide random sample survey of 150 consumers and 150 newspaper
editors who cover food and food safety issues. The 1997 survey was
cosponsored
by the Industry Council on Food Safety, the restaurant and foodservice
industry coalition.
The CMF&Z Industry council survey showed 79 percent of consumers
had recently seen or heard media accounts of food safety issues including
stories related to tainted strawberries, E-Coli:015H7 bacteria, salmonella,
food handling/preparation and others. While 32 percent of consumers
believe less than one-half of media stories on food safety issues, more
than three-fourths of the consumers surveyed said they would take action
in response to negative stories concerning safe drinking water, bacteria
in food and food preparation (CMF&Z Public Relations, September,
1997)
An example of action taken by consumers in direct response to the E-Coli:015H7
outbreak in the state of Washington in January of 1993 and succeeding
outbreaks was the formation of an organization called S.T.O.P.-Safe
Tables Our Priority. The membership is comprised of families whose children
became seriously ill and or died from consuming foods contaminated with
E-Coli:015H7 bacteria. This activist consumer group's goal is to reduce
the risk of foodborne illness. Their members are now invited to participate
in policy making meetings of federal agencies with responsibility for
protecting the food supply. Media attention and pressure from consumer
activist groups such as S.T.O.P. have influenced federal and state regulatory
agencies to issue emergency regulations.
Reasons for Increased Incidents of Foodborne Illness
- Better methods
of detection and identification
- Advances in science
and technology allow for better methods of detection and identification
of foodborne illness and the pathogen that may be causing the
illness.
- Previously "unknown" causes
of foodborne illness have been identified.
- Microorganisms
are developing resistance to antibiotics.
- They are adapting
to changes in their environment which threaten their survival.
- Change in consumer
demographics
- Changing family structure
including an increasing number of two paycheck families, women
in the workforce and a greater number of single heads of households.
- Increasing numbers
of persons who are immunosuppressed which includes people who
are HIV positive, undergoing chemotherapy or organ transplants
and those individuals with long term chronic illnesses.
- The elderly are an
increasing percentage of the population. (l5.12% of the U.S. population
according to the 1990 U.S. Census)
- Change in Consumer
Lifestyles
- Desire for foods
that have a fresh taste and are minimally packaged and processed.
- Increasing number
of labor-saving food preparation equipment, i.e., food processors,
microwave ovens.
- Lack of knowledge
of basic food safety principles
- Limited commitment
to food preparation activities in the home.
- More interested
in convenience and saving time than proper food handling and preparation
(Collins, 1997)
- More than one third
of meals are eaten away from home.
- Changes in the
Food System-Farm to Table.
- A global food economy
and rapid transportation system have evolved to satisfy consumer
demand for a wide variety of foods, especially fruits and vegetables.
- Consolidation of
small animal slaughtering/processing operations into large, efficient
centrally located operations.
- The food processing
industry, in response to consumer demand, has developed new processing
techniques, unique packaging concepts and new distribution strategies
which can create new food safety risks.
- The lines between
food processors, retail grocers and food service operators have
begun to fade. For example, supermarkets may offer a variety of
ready to eat foods for consumption at home.
References:
Creswell, Munsel, Fultz & Zirbel-Public Relations Company, Des
Moines,
Iowa 515-246-3500
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