BLACKHERBALS.COM


FDA knew for
Years of Potential Problems with Spinach
The Food and Drug Administration has known for years about contamination
problems at a Georgia peanut-butter plant and on California spinach farms that
led to disease outbreaks that killed three people, sickened hundreds and
forced one of the biggest product recalls in U.S. history, documents and
interviews show.
Overwhelmed by huge growth in the number of food processors and imports,
however, the agency took only limited steps to address the problems and relied
on producers to police themselves, according to agency documents.
Congressional critics and consumer advocates said both episodes show that the
agency is incapable of adequately protecting the safety of the food supply.
FDA officials conceded that the system needs to be overhauled to meet today's
demands but denied that the agency could have done anything to prevent either
contamination episode.
Last week, the FDA notified California state health officials that hogs on a
farm in the state had likely eaten feed laced with melamine, an industrial
chemical blamed for the deaths of dozens of pets in recent weeks. Officials
are trying to determine whether the chemical's presence in the hogs represents
a threat to humans.
Pork from animals raised on the farm has been recalled. The FDA has said its
inspectors probably would not have found the contaminated food before problems
arose. The tainted additive caused a recall of more than 100 brands of pet
food.
The outbreaks point to a need to completely overhaul the way the agency does
business, said Robert Brackett, director of the FDA's food-safety arm, which
is responsible for safeguarding 80 percent of the nation's food supply.
"We have 60,000 to 80,000 facilities that we're responsible for in any given
year," Brackett said. Explosive growth in the number of processors and the
amount of imported foods means manufacturers "have to build safety into their
products rather than us chasing after them," Brackett said. Tuesday, the House
Energy and Commerce committee will hold a hearing into the unprecedented spate
of recalls, including the more recent contamination of pet food.
In the peanut-butter case, an agency report shows FDA inspectors checked into
complaints about salmonella contamination in a ConAgra factory in Georgia in
2005. But when company managers refused to provide documents the inspectors
requested, they left and failed to follow up.
Earlier this year, a salmonella outbreak traced to the plant's Peter Pan and
Great Value peanut-butter brands sickened more than 400 people in 44 states.
The likely cause, ConAgra said, was moisture from a roof leak and a
malfunctioning sprinkler system that activated dormant salmonella in the
plant, which is now closed.
The 2005 report shows FDA inspectors were looking into "an alleged episode of
positive findings of salmonella in peanut butter in October of 2004 that was
related to new equipment and that the firm didn't react to ... insects in some
equipment, water leaking onto product, and inability to track some product."
During the inspection, the report says, ConAgra admitted it had destroyed some
product in October 2004 but would not say why.
"They asked for some of our documentation and we made the request to them that
they put it in writing due to concerns about proprietary information," said
ConAgra spokeswoman Stephanie Childs last week. "We did not receive a written
request ... they filed the report and that was that."
Until February of this year. That's when the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention notified the FDA of a spike in salmonella cases in states near the
ConAgra plant. The agencies contacted the company, which initiated a recall
and shut the plant for upgrades.
Brackett said that if the inspector had seen anything truly dangerous, the
agency would have taken further action. But, he said, the agency cannot force
a disclosure, a recall or a plant closure except in extreme circumstances,
such as finding a hazardous batch of product. The problem in 2005, he added,
"doesn't necessarily connect to the salmonella outbreak right now. It's not
unusual to have it in raw agricultural commodities."
The FDA has known for even longer about illnesses among people who ate spinach
and other greens from California's Salinas Valley, the source of outbreaks
over the past six months that have killed three people and sickened more than
200 in 26 states. The subsequent recall was the largest ever for leafy
vegetables.
In a letter sent to California growers in late 2005, Brackett wrote, "FDA is
aware of 18 outbreaks of foodborne illness since 1995 caused by (E. coli
bacteria) for which fresh or fresh-cut lettuce was implicated ... In one
additional case, fresh-cut spinach was implicated. These 19 outbreaks account
for approximately 409 reported cases of illness and two deaths."
"We know that there are still problems out in those fields," Brackett said in
an interview last week. "We knew there had been a problem, but we never and
probably still could not pinpoint where the problem was. We could have that
capability, but not at this point." According to Caroline Smith DeWaal, who
heads the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a consumer advocacy
group, "When budgets are tight ... the food program at FDA gets hit the
hardest."
In next year's budget, passed amid contamination problems in spinach, tomatoes
and lettuce, Congress has voted the FDA a $10 million increase to improve food
safety, DeWaal said. The Agriculture Department, which monitors meat, poultry
and eggs and keeps inspectors in every processing plant, got an increase 10
times that amount to help pay for its inspection programs. The FDA visits
problem food plants about once a year, the rest far less frequently, Brackett
said.
Source: The Washington Post
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