Peanut Recalls and Plant Closings


Food Recalls and Your Health: Page 2

AOL Health: Is it true that state and federal inspectors do not require the peanut industry to inform the public or even the government about each positive salmonella test in its products?

Andress: That would be true for the peanut industry as well as some other food manufacturers. This information is considered "proprietary" -- private -- and belongs to the company. There have been some calls for more openness to reporting these findings. What is important in the system now is that products testing positive for certain contaminants should not to enter the marketplace.

Another important thing to understand is that the FDA does not actually have the authority to recall a lot of food out of the marketplace. They have to work with the company to get the recalls out of the marketplace. There have been calls to give the FDA more authority to issue recalls.

AOL Health: Would giving the FDA more authority help improve food safety?

Andress: The authority is probably only as good as the resources to enforce it. More authority could probably impact food safety for the better, but if they don't have the resources [improvements may be difficult].

AOL Health: How often do companies do their own testing for salmonella? How often do state and federal inspectors come in?

Andress: It would depend on the actual product it has and what kind of risk level it has. Again it really depends on the nature of the business. Meat and poultry product plants usually have to have inspectors present every time they're running the product. The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the FDA do not actually have a lot of authority unless interstate transport and sales are involved. Some states, however, require federal oversight regardless.

AOL Health: Are grocery stores and restaurants required to pull all recalled products? Is this an honors system, or is there some sort of check for this?

Andress: They are to remove them from their shelves. Where there is difficulty, is how fast this news is spread and therefore how quickly they can respond. Big chains probably have mechanisms in place to put these recall procedures into place and react immediately. Mom and pop places probably have to keep up with the news and proactively seek out product recall lists.

That check would most likely totally depend on state or local resources. In Georgia, our State Department of Agriculture is responsible for inspecting food sales. We don't have an inspector in every county. They aren't going to be there immediately the next day. Whereas the restaurant industry is inspected by the department of health which does have county inspectors.

If it's a fairly straightforward recall -- maybe one item is being recalled -- I would expect this product to be off the shelves within a day or two. But the nature with this part recall is very different. They are pulling products from January 2007. [Peanut Corporation of America] is not just recalling things under their own brand name. They're having to contact all of the companies that use their peanuts and peanut paste products as an ingredient, so this one is taking longer than others. Once the item is known and the recall is put out, ideally they would be out in a day or two. Media attention is a good indicator of how quickly it will get resolved. This is getting a lot of media attention.

AOL Health: How long could this go on for?

Andress: I honestly have no idea. This is kind of unprecedented. They're issuing at least 10 notices -- if not more -- a day or so. There's a good chance that some of the recalls are no longer in the marketplace, but since they concern shelf-stable foods like pastes and trail mixes they may still be sitting on people's shelves. If you have it around, you need to not eat it.

AOL Health: Where should people go if they think they've been infected?

Andress: If you think you're sick from any bacterial illness get medical attention first. Particularly if you're a younger person, an older person or have pre-existing medical condition. Then, contact your regional FDA office and let them know. Unless your doctor actually does a specimen testing -- usually this is a stool sample analysis -- your case won't get recorded.

AOL Health: Recent news reports indicate that 19,000 people across 43 states have been affected, leading to eight deaths. Why did some cases lead to death?

Vulnerable populations -- with weakened natural immunity -- are probably going to get sick at a lower dose than someone with a healthy immune system and have more severe symptoms. It relates to how well your body can handle and fight off disease and symptoms. If you're under the age of five years old, you're at risk. As you age, the more likely you are to get sick and get worse symptoms. Pregnant women are more at risk as you're immune system is more susceptible to illness and infection, as are those living with chronic diseases, such as kidney disease, heart disease, AIDS and being treated for cancer.

AOL Health: How could theses deaths have been averted?

Andress: I can't speak to what happened to those people specifically, but generally, not eating contaminated product and not delaying in seeking medical attention can help. And in general if everyone in the food chain -- growers, manufacturers, retailers, inspectors -- avoids putting contaminated food out, then we would have far fewer illnesses.

AOL Health: Could the cost of health care and increase of uninsured and underinsured impact the number of salmonella cases that have been reported?

Andress: It could impact the number of cases that are reported. Another factor we have is if your doctor just treats symptoms it will never get reported without laboratory testing.

AOL Health: When will it be clear that the crisis has passed?

Andress: I have no idea when. Obviously because of the attention this is getting [the end] will be [covered] in mass media news. I cannot even begin to guess how long this is going to go on.

AOL Health: What's to say this won't happen again?

Andress: An important factor is that we learn from the mistakes. There needs to be more oversight, more openness of test findings before products go to market. We need to fix our food system. We need to take a hard look at our regulatory system -- the roles of the FDA and the USDA in food safety.

AOL Health: Are you avoiding peanut-based products?

Andress: I have made sure I am not consuming anything that's part of the recall. I am not worried about my peanut butter at all. I personally do not usually eat any snack foods that have these peanut and peanut-based ingredients in them like granola, ice cream and candies. I am certainly making sure I am not buying anything new in the kinds of products being recalled unless I can confirm from the manufacturer they don't buy ingredients from the affected plant. But I realize that with products being added every day that it's hard to keep up. I have a kind of granola bar that hasn't been included in the recall list yet -- I'm not eating it but I'm not throwing it out either until we know more.

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