Unique Quality Products
Protect Americans Against Salmonella
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Sponsor: The Hunger Site
Salmonella is a foodborne bacteria that can travel on poultry and meat. In a number of cases, salmonella outbreaks have led to poisoning, lasting health issues, and even death1.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that Salmonella infection causes 23,000 hospitalizations and 450 deaths in the United States each year2.
Of those who are most vulnerable and most likely to get a Salmonella infection:
- Children under 5 years old.
- Infants (children younger than 12 months) who are not breast fed.
- Infants, adults aged 65 and older, and people with a weakened immune system.
- People taking certain medicines (for example, stomach acid reducers).
Raw poultry is the largest single source of salmonella infections, and salmonella causes more serious illnesses than any other foodborne pathogen3. It sickens about 1.35 millionpeople in the US each year; about 26,500 of them end up in the hospital, and 420 die2.
Mild cases of salmonella may result in fever and diarrhea, lasting up to a week3. But if the bacteria make their way to the bloodstream and infect bones, joints, and the nervous system, victims may eventually suffer from arthritis and long-term circulatory problems4.
Today, the USDA can only ask meat producers to voluntarily recall their products, and can force recalls only for contamination with E. coli O157:H7 or a few related strains that can severely damage red blood cells5. That power was not granted until 1993 when a salmonella outbreak outbreak at the Jack in the Box fast-food chain sickened 732 kids who ate hamburgers from the restaurant. Four of those children eventually died and left 178 with kidney and brain damage6.
Companies typically move at their own pace to remediate these risks. That leaves consumers vulnerable to threats they do not know exist.
More recently, a coalition of consumer groups have compelled a change in federal food-safety regulation that could close this gap in oversight7.
The US Department of Agriculture is now considering activating the power to monitor salmonella contamination in live birds and slaughterhouses, and to force producers to recall contaminated meat from the marketplace8.
The new framework calls for testing flocks as they arrive at slaughterhouses, which could motivate poultry growers to control the pathogen on their farms. It proposes further controls in slaughter and packaging, and maintains an “enforceable final product standard,” which would prohibit the release of products that contain dangerous strains of salmonella bacteria8.
The problem is, there are thousands of strains of salmonella, and not all of them cause serious illness9. This makes addressing contamination a complicated effort, requiring inspections of packaged meat as well as slaughterhouse and farm conditions.
It’s work that must be done to prevent millions of Americans from getting sick every year from this dangerous bacteria.
Sign the petition and stop salmonella by supporting the FDA’s proposed food safety framework!