Archive | June, 2012

Safe Dining for Moms-to-Be; TABC Applies Brakes on Spring Break

27 Jun

Eating out means eating right. In the midst of food recalls and multi-state foodborne illness outbreaks, the injunction has never been truer—especially for pregnant moms, who must be particularly careful of what they eat because of their compromised immune systems.

That is not to say of course that moms should stop going to Taco Bell or KFC (most restaurants now require a food safety certification or a food handler certification as an employment requirement) and make do with home cooking all nine months. Continue reading

New ISO Standards for Fire Risks, Environmental Impacts of Concrete

27 Jun

Fires often cause severe injuries, deaths, and very costly extensive building damage. It is important that the circumstances that can lead to a fire be managed correctly and preemptively. Recognizing this need, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) recently released of a new standard for fire prevention and mitigation.

The new ISO standard, ISO 16732-1 (Fire safety engineering – Fire risk assessment – Part 1: General), is intended for fire-safety practitioners to help them evaluate fire risks of all kinds and choose from existing technologies and strategies the most effective in preventing fire. Continue reading

MDP Might Be Discontinued, but New Salmonella Research Brings New Insight

18 Jun

The federation of State Public Interest Research Groups (PIRG) is up in arms over federal plans to cut the Agriculture Department’s whole budget of $5 million for the Microbiological Data Program (MDG), effectively eliminating the nation’s largest produce testing program. According to PIRG, MDG is responsible for screening high-risk fresh produce for pathogens such as Salmonella, E. coli, and Listeria, conducting about 15,000 random tests a year.

Although many restaurant owners have made a valuable contribution to food safety by making a food handler certification or a food safety certification an employment requirement, the food-supply chain has many stops and foodborne pathogens can enter the chain at any of them. MDG attempts to arrest the entry of pathogens in the middle of the chain.

PIRG’s alarm comes on the heels of Dole’s recent recall of some 800 bags of lettuce after Salmonella was discovered by MDG during random sampling in New York, one of 11 states that host produce distribution centers from which samples are collected to gather data on E. coli (STEC), E. coli O157:H7 and other pathogens.

“Cutting this program will leave public health officials without a crucial tool used to investigate deadly foodborne illnesses in fresh produce leaving inspections in the hands of produce producers. Is this really conducive to keeping consumers safe?” asked Nasima Hossain, a U.S. PIRG public health advocate. “In view of the accelerated increase in foodborne illnesses linked to fresh produce, and this latest recall of bagged lettuce, we think the USDA should reconsider cutting this program which is thoughtless and will leave the public increasingly in more danger.”

MDP was launched under President Bush’s 2001 Food Safety Initiative.

Meanwhile, the U.S. continues to suffer from Salmonella infections, which has increased 10 percent in recent years, accounting for about a million people across the country falling ill from the pathogen every year. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Salmonella infections represent nearly half of the hospitalizations and deaths among the nine foodborne illnesses that CDC monitors.

The CDC says the bacterium, which exists as several harmful and dangerous subtypes, causes some $365 million in direct medical costs every year in the U.S., and a staggering $14.6 billion annually in efforts to keep it out of the food-supply chain.

Now, an international team of researchers has taken a big step toward taming Salmonella infections. Led by University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB) researchers Michael Mahan and Douglas Heithoff, the team has successfully identified certain hypervirulent subtypes of Salmonella and believes that the feat represents a first step toward preventing food poisoning outbreaks caused by the pathogen.

The UCSB researchers reported finding 14 hypervirulent subtypes and discovering the powerfully infectious strains were restricted to certain serotypes. The scientists said they are now developing protocols to quickly detect the most dangerous strains and, ultimately, to come up with therapies to combat them.

Lawsuit Filed Against North Carolina Restaurant as Salmonella Outbreak Expands

1 Jun

A lawsuit has been filed against a Charlotte, North Carolina restaurant, Toast of Dilworth, which served Eggs Benedict that apparently sickened 10 customers with Salmonella enteritidis infection. The formal complaint was made by Seattle food-safety law firm Marler Clark on behalf of Bryan McWherter, a Charlotte resident.

Because food safety depends to a large degree on proper food handling, many restaurant owners today have made a ISOcampus 22000 Training or a food safety certification an employment requirement. Much needs to be done, however, judging from the current frequency of foodborne illnesses. Continue reading