From the first reports of a salmonella outbreak this spring, it took a full 89 days before jalapeƱo and serrano peppers correctly came under suspicion as the culprit. During that period, as more than 1,440 victims trickled in to hospitals, federal officials struggled to trace the source of the outbreak, erroneously singling out tomatoes for weeks before homing in on peppers. No sooner had that outbreak tapered off than the high-end Whole Foods Market was forced to launch a massive recall of E. coli-infested ground beef.
The incidents prompted renewed calls for reform and stricter oversight of food safety. Some lawmakers are even suggesting stripping the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture of their inspection duties and giving them to a new agency. Yet the FDA in particular has long been starved of funding and understaffed. Its workload, meanwhile, is rapidly expanding as the global food chain grows larger, more complicated, and less transparent, all of which adds to the agency's already overcrowded plate.
By Kent GarberRead full article here.
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December 22, 2008










2 comments:
Have you ever had any incidents at work, health or sanitation wise?
I remember once a guy has a heart attack in the Dining Room and a Doctor at the party came to the Kitchen and needed a knife to do a procedure a la minute so I gave him my paring knife.
Dude died anyway.
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