My money's on Doyle

Posted: August 22nd, 2007 - 8:12pm by Doug Powell


Who would you believe?

Dr. Michael Doyle (pictured), director of the University of Georgia Center for Food Safety told the Institute of Food Technologists Annual Meeting and Food Expo that in the 25 years preceding 1997, there were 190 outbreaks of foodborne illness associated with fresh produce. In the five years that followed, that number jumped to 249. The list of offenders varied from lettuce, melons and seed sprouts to apple juice, orange juice and tomatoes.

Doyle predicts that produce and other foods from plants will be the dominant vehicles for foodborne illnesses, accounting for more than 50 percent of all illnesses currently estimated at more than 70 million cases a year.

Dan Dempster, president, Canadian Produce Marketing Association, told several Canadian papers that fewer than 3 per cent of the 1,127 outbreaks of foodborne illness reported in Canada were definitively linked to fresh fruits and vegetables, and that produce "is actually the safest fresh food group," based on an unpublished study that apparently the industry has been privy too.

I'll stick with Dr. Doyle.
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Categories: Food Safety Policy, Raw Food
Tags: Produce

Comments

Troy Huffman says:

Doug,How can you use the words privy and foodborne illness in the same paragraph and keep a straight face!!!!!I see you working...Don't Eat Poop!!!

Posted on August 23rd, 2007 - 10:22am

Michael_A_Lambert says:

DougDrs. Doyle and Dempster are counting two different things: Doyle - percent of outbreaks associated with pathogen linked to produce, and Dempster - the percentage of all cases where the source of the bacteria has been IDed. Most FBD outbreaks and cases are still not linked to a pathogen or a source but our ID percentage has been improving greatly in recent years, at least in the US.

Posted on August 23rd, 2007 - 11:14am

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