October 11th, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
Click here to read Part 1 of this interview with Dr. Sanford Miller, a senior fellow at the University of Maryland Center for Food, Nutrition and Agriculture Policy, as well as former director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.
Some experts have said we are going to see more cases similar to the recent E. coli outbreak. Do you agree?
Dr. Miller: Since I have been one of these “experts” for the last 25 years, I really believe that the number of such events will increase.
The basic problem is the lack of resources and authority. There is also the problem associated with the fragmentation of responsibility and authority for food safety. At least 12 agencies have responsibilities for food safety, as do state and local authorities. The amazing thing is not that we have events such as the spinach problem, but rather that we don’t have many more.
Nevertheless, as the nature of the food supply changes to include more prepackaged, minimally processed foods, many of the traditional techniques we use to protect our food, such as cooking, are lost.
It has been estimated that 81 million food-related illnesses occur in the United States each year, most of which are unreported. It seems clear that we need to seriously examine this issue again in terms of authority, funding, research and organization.

Do we have adequate safeguards on imported foods?
Dr. Miller: Imported products must meet the same standards as domestic products. Depending on where they come from, the requirements may be stricter or involve problems unique to the exporting country.
The problem, again, is the question of resources. The result is that there are not as many inspections as there should be. It is important to note, however, that, proportionally, imported products are examined more frequently than many domestic ones.
Does washing produce at home get rid of disease-causing bacteria?
Dr. Miller: It is always a good idea to wash fresh produce if only to remove the surface dirt and sand. Washing with mild soap will also remove pesticide residues. However, it probably will not remove all bacteria from the surface unless a bactericidal detergent is used.
Tune in tomorrow for the conclusion of this series.
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October 9th, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
The recent contamination of fresh spinach has raised new questions about food safety in the United States. Last Wednesday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California executed two search warrants on Growers Express in Salinas and Natural Selection Foods in San Juan Bautista in connection with the E. coli outbreak that the FDA has traced to spinach grown in the Salinas area.
“I want to reassure the public that there is no indication in this investigation that leaf spinach was deliberately or intentionally contaminated,” says U.S. Attorney Kevin V. Ryan. “We are investigating allegations that certain spinach growers and distributors may not have taken all necessary or appropriate steps to ensure that their spinach was safe before it was placed into interstate commerce. Moreover, the investigation has not revealed any evidence of a new or continuing threat to public health in connection with the matters under investigation.”
Dr. Sanford Miller, a senior fellow at the University of Maryland Center for Food, Nutrition and Agriculture Policy, says this won’t be the last contamination event. Here, the former director of the FDA Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition addresses key issues.
How do bacteria like E. coli find their way to fresh produce?
Dr. Miller: We share the world we live in with a multitude of other organisms, including bacteria. Most of these are benign, but some are pathogenic and can cause disease. Produce is grown in the ground and, as a result, is exposed to all of the organisms normally found there, including pathogens. Also, the water used to irrigate the plants may be contaminated with pathogens as a result of runoff from the fields. It is also possible that the producers used a “natural” fertilizer such as manure that was not properly dried and pasteurized. Since pathogens such as E. coli are found in the gastrointestinal tract of animals such as cattle and pigs, it is possible that improperly treated manure could contaminate the plants. The organism can also be carried in the GI tract of wild animals.
What are the required safeguards against produce contamination in the United States?
Dr. Miller: The basic line of defense is hygiene. Manure fertilizers must be processed to a standard that will result in a 100% kill. Water standards for irrigation must be met. In the packing plants, workers must wash their hands and be taken off the line if ill. Strict temperature standards must be met to assure that the product remains cold while being shipped and stored. It is interesting to note that many of the requirements are the same as those that should be followed for high-quality products.
Can you speculate about why these safeguards didn’t work in this spinach case?
Dr. Miller: It’s hard to tell. The most likely scenario would result from the use of contaminated irrigation water. If the producers were organic farms, it might be improperly processed organic fertilizer. A less likely event would be storage of the product at relatively high temperatures, such as might have occurred if a refrigerated railway car lost its temperature control. Probably, a number of factors were involved. Another problem results from the lack of resources FDA has to apply to this problem. Rather than vigorously working to prevent these occurrences, the FDA is forced to play fireman and respond to crises. At this time, FDA and CDC investigators are exploring all these possibilities and more.
Tune in tomorrow for Part 2 of this interview.
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October 4th, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
If you miss buying fresh spinach at your local natural and organic food store, you may continue to have trouble finding it, even though crops grown outside Central California have been cleared by the feds.
Financially, the spinach industry may be crippled by the recent E. coli outbreak, according to two agricultural economists at Kansas State University. Producers faced significant losses when fresh spinach, regardless of where it was grown, was pulled from store shelves.
Approximately 70% of U.S. fresh spinach production—a $200 million-a-year industry—is concentrated in California. Losses to individual producers will be substantial, note Professor Sean Fox, PhD, and Associate Professor John Crespi, PhD. As a direct result of the E. coli outbreak, growers in the Salinas Valley area of California plowed under their crops.
“The fresh product cannot be stored for very long,” Dr. Crespi says, “and the crop has a short harvest window before it goes to seed.”
Isolated food-safety incidents generally do not have a significant long-range impact on product demand, but this case may be different, Dr. Fox maintains. With 187 confirmed cases of infection, 97 hospitalizations and one death, “from the perspective of the consumer, the risk is more immediate and more tangible,” he says.
And because spinach is a relatively small component of the average American’s diet, most consumers have found ways to replace or do without it. Dr. Fox thinks the spinach industry will likely suffer.
“Fresh spinach consumption has grown dramatically in the U.S. over the past 15 years, and U.S. production has more than tripled since 1990,” he says. “I suspect this incident will be a major setback for the sector.”
But the spinach industry’s loss may benefit other members of the produce family.
“I’ve spoken to two local grocery stores, and they indicate that, at this point, they are not seeing any reduction in sales of other fresh packaged vegetables,” Dr. Fox says. “In fact, with spinach off the shelf, sales of mixed salads may be higher.”
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October 3rd, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
The E. coli outbreak traced to bagged spinach highlights the need for improved detection in food processing.
Dr. Raj Mutharasan, a professor of chemical engineering at Drexel University in Philadelphia, is optimizing a sensor that will allow both conventional and organic growers to do the job themselves in a few minutes.
Dr. Mutharasan has developed a sensor that’s precise, accurate and inexpensive (just a few dollars). It can detect pathogens or bacteria like E. coli within 10 minutes, with a sensitivity of four cells per milliliter.
The standard detection process takes about 24 hours and involves a trip to the laboratory. Dr. Mutharasan’s sensor fits into a palm-sized device for food inspectors and growers. And because the technology is so cheap, consumers may be able to purchase a sensor for home use in the future.
Dr. Mutharasan is working with a company to bring his device to the marketplace. He expects it to be in the hands of food safety experts soon.
Our Complete Coverage (Chronological)
Spinach and E. Coli Outbreak
Spinach Woes
Shopping for Bagged Greens
Is It Safe to Eat Frozen Spinach?
Organic Farming and E. Coli Outbreak
Preventing E. Coli Infection
Spinach Ban Modified, But Consumer Caution Advised
E. Coli Outbreak and Our Contaminated Food Supply
FDA Announces E. Coli Outbreak Findings
Read More: New Sensor Quickly Detects E. Coli
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October 2nd, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
On Friday, the FDA formally announced that all spinach implicated in the current E. coli outbreak has been traced to Natural Selection Foods of San Juan Bautista, Calif., the company that issued a recall on Sept.15. Four other companies issued secondary recalls because they received their spinach from Natural Selection.
The FDA, state of California, CDC and Department of Agriculture are continuing their investigations into the outbreak’s cause, including inspections and sample collection in facilities, the environment and water. Inspectors will also examine animal management.
While the current outbreak may ultimately be traced to specific fields, there’s been a long history of E. coli O157:H7 outbreaks involving leafy greens from Central California. Spinach processed by other manufacturers has not been implicated in this outbreak, but the FDA and California officials expect the produce industry to develop a comprehensive plan to minimize the risk of future outbreaks. All growers are being advised to review their operations to minimize microbial hazards.
The Grower Shipper Association of Central California, the Produce Marketing Association, the United Fresh Produce Association and the Western Growers Association pledged to “learn everything we can from this tragedy” and “redouble our efforts to do everything in our power to reduce the potential risk of foodborne illness.” These groups also promise to “work aggressively with the Food and Drug Administration and state regulatory authorities to ensure the industry’s growing and processing practices continue to be based on the very best scientific information available, and that we are doing everything possible to provide the nation with safe and healthy produce.”
Unfortunately, implementation of such plans remains voluntary, but the FDA and California officials are “not excluding the possibility of regulatory requirements in the future.”
In the meantime, the FDA is still reminding the public that Natural Selection Foods has recalled all spinach products under multiple brand names with a date code of Oct. 1 or earlier. Retailers and restaurateurs should not sell raw spinach or blends that may contain spinach processed by the company.
The FDA also reminds consumers that proper storage of fresh produce can affect both quality and safety. Certain perishable fresh fruits and vegetables (such as strawberries, lettuce, herbs and mushrooms) are best stored in a clean refrigerator, with the temperature set at 40°F or below. Refrigerate all produce purchased precut or peeled to maintain quality and safety.
OrganicAuthority.com has listed recalled products in previous articles, so please click on the links that follow for full details.
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September 27th, 2006 - Laura Klein
Numerous media outlets have blamed the recent E. coli outbreak on a specific source: Natural Selection Foods/Earthbound Farms, the leading U.S. provider of organic greens. But the press fails to examine the true root cause of the problem.At first glance, we may think it’s right to blame the grower and processor; however, an in-depth investigation into the source of the deadly strain of E. coli 0157:H7 must be top priority for the FDA, which monitors produce and seafood and is a part of the Health and Human Services Department, and the Agriculture Department, which has jurisdiction over meat and poultry.
In a Los Angeles Times article last week, focus shifted to implementing stricter FDA regulations and guidelines, as well as upping the number of inspections at food processing plants. Treating, instead of preventing, the problem seems to be the typical philosophy adopted by the Western world. Why not eliminate the problem at its source, before tainted produce hits the market? While the contamination source in the current outbreak has yet to be identified, E. coli O157:H7 infections have historically been linked to fecal matter from cattle.
Government and corporate agriculture seem to be in complete denial. What the FDA, the Department of Agriculture and corporate farming continue to overlook are the unhealthy, absolutely disgusting living conditions in which America raises its conventional cattle, chickens, pigs and any other meat that is factory-farmed. Has anyone noticed that numerous European countries and Canada will not accept our conventionally raised meat and dairy products—or that Japan placed a ban on our beef, fearing mad cow disease? The United States has a serious problem with factory-farming methods. Consider the following facts.
Certified organic food producers meet stringent regulations on the federal, state and local levels, in addition to strict federal standards for certified organic and growing processing. The use of compost and uncomposted manure is heavily regulated under certified organic standards. Other farming methods do not have to meet these standards and are unregulated.
There are more than 100 strains of E. coli, and most are beneficial. In fact, E. coli lives in the healthy human and cattle intestinal tract, among other beneficial bacteria that are necessary for proper development and good health. It is the deadly strain of E. coli 0157:H7 that’s toxic and potentially fatal.
The beneficial E. coli is found in the intestines of healthy, naturally raised, grass-fed cattle. The severely toxic form of E. coli 0157:H7 flourishes in the stomachs of factory-farmed cattle fed a diet rich in grains. The infected cows then produce infected manure that contaminates soil and groundwater, which can be carried to neighboring farms.
A 2003 Journal of Dairy Science article reveals up to 80 percent of factory-farmed dairy cattle fed a grain-based diet carried the deadly strain of E. coli. When cows were switched to a healthy grass and hay diet for five days, the infection rate declined a thousandfold. Have the FDA and Agriculture Department seen this study?
Natural Selection Foods issued the following statement last week, clearly noting that the current E. coli cases resulted from packages of conventional spinach:
Based on our work with the U.S. Food & Drug Administration and the California Department of Health Services, we have confirmed that no organic products of any kind, including Earthbound Farm spinach or other products, have been linked to this outbreak at this time.
At this point in the investigation, all of the manufacturing codes taken from spinach packaging retained by patients are from packages of conventional (non-organic) spinach. However, the investigation is still underway.
Another myth the media perpetuate, and which corporate agriculture is happy to promote, is that organic produce is more likely to be contaminated by E. coli 0157:H7. There is no evidence to support this claim. All food – conventional and organic – is susceptible to E. coli. University of Minnesota researchers studied the prevalence of E. coli in freshly picked produce and published their findings in 2004 in the Journal of Food Protection (Vol. 67, No. 5, 2004). They found the percentage occurrence of E. coli in certified organic produce was similar to that in conventional samples. They did, however, find a marked difference in the prevalence of E. coli in certified versus noncertified organic samples.
I am not a vegetarian; I enjoy eating meat. But once one is aware of how farmers treat their animals, the motivation to go vegetarian is much stronger. At home, I eat organic foods exclusively, including meat. When I go out to eat, my strict organic diet is tough to enforce, particularly when I choose to eat meat. Now I find myself thinking twice about ordering meat anywhere. When I look at the menu, I consider the establishment I’m in and ask myself whether the restaurant has a reputation for purchasing high-quality organic and natural foods. If I am considering a meat dish, I ask the waiter where the meat comes from and whether it’s truly all natural or organic. At that point, I make my decision.
If I am getting a true, high-quality, natural and organic dish, I don’t mind paying a few extra dollars. I am not going to be a victim of our government’s and corporate agriculture’s inadequacies and demonstrated inability to look after the health of our citizens. I also refuse to become a casualty of the side effects of pharmaceutical-industry drugs. I practice preventive medicine and carefully choose natural and organic foods that will keep my immune system strong and help fight disease. I believe spending a few extra dollars today will save me a few thousand dollars in doctor visits and pharmaceutical bills down the road. I also have a healthy respect for my food and am willing to pay a little more to ensure its quality. Perhaps if everyone was willing to pay a little more, Americans might eat a little less and our obesity epidemic would decline.
When will the Western world figure out that scientific “advancements” in genetically modified foods, growth hormones, antibiotics, pesticides and fumigants designed to outthink Mother Nature do more harm than good? When will the masses admit something is inherently wrong with conventional and factory-farming methods, and that we need to go back to the basics? Science, big government and large corporations forget who’s really in charge. Humans are fallible; we must pay attention to the signals Mother Nature sends us and recognize that what we’re doing is enormously wrong.
Last week, the Cornucopia Institute, a corporate watchdog for the organic farming industry, issued a press release with a series of talking points. I am publishing them here to remind us of why we must continue to support organic produce, pressuring our government and corporate agriculture to face the facts about factory-farming and its threat to human health. It’s critical that we place more stringent demands on our government’s food safety system, testing every single factory-farm for the presence of the deadly E. coli and mad cow disease. Japan tests every cow. Why can’t we do the same?
Talking Points
1. Organic Farming Protects Humans, Livestock and Environment from Dangerous, Profit-Motivated Industrial Agricultural Practices
The following information is a counter to the attempt by right-wing think tanks (the Hudson Institute, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, etc.) who are already trying to exploit the spinach E. coli contamination crisis to discredit organic farming practices. Think-tank funding for much of this activity comes from Monsanto, DuPont and other agrichemical manufacturers.
Unless otherwise identified, all discussion points can be attributed to The Cornucopia Institute’s Senior Farm Policy Analyst, Mark A. Kastel.
• A study by the University of Minnesota, published in the May 2004 issue of Journal of Food Protection, concluded that there was no statistical difference between contamination in vegetables grown on conventional and organic Minnesota farms, with chemical fertilizer and composted manure, respectively.
2. Risks from industrial concentration/factory-farming
• According to an FDA letter to growers (November 2005): “The FDA is aware of 18 outbreaks of foodborne illness since 1995 caused by Escherichia coli 0157:H7 for which fresh or fresh cut-lettuce was implicated as the outbreak vehicle.”
• This is a problem that far supersedes debates about the merit of organic farming. This is a grave public health risk directly attributable to industrial-scale livestock production (factory-farming).
• This agricultural area of California, where this latest contamination crisis originated, produces the majority of the country’s spinach and many other fresh-market vegetables. It is contiguous to many CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) managing thousands of dairy cows each.
• The combination of this concentration of a mountain of manure in a relatively small geographic area, and animal feeding practices, poses tremendous health and environmental liabilities.
• E. coli and other potent pathogens are known to migrate onto neighboring farms by contamination of surface water and groundwater and/or by becoming airborne through blowing dust from feedlots or farm fields where manure has been spread.
• The FDA’s November 2005 letter went on to say, “E. coli O157-H7 was isolated from sediment in an irrigation canal bordering a ranch that had been identified in three separate outbreaks.”
• A concern is that many of the pathogens now entering the food chain due to industrial agricultural practices are becoming resistant to many antibiotics due to their widespread use in livestock production.
• “To get this many people sick, it’s got to be the water,” said William Marler, a Seattle attorney who is representing 25 victims of the outbreak. “Thirty years ago, if you bought contaminated lettuce or spinach, just your family would get sick. Now it’s a nationwide outbreak.”
• E. coli O157-H7 is a by-product of grain-based feeding to ruminants (dairy and beef cattle) in an attempt to fatten them up quicker and at a lower cost. The cow’s digestive system (and acid balance) evolved to break down grass, not high-production, refined rations. This health crisis, and past deadly problems with contaminated meat, is a direct by-product of producing cheap, unhealthy cattle.
• The majority of all animal manure, as well as municipal sewage sludge (politely referred to as biosolids—human waste), in this country is spread on conventional crops. In most cases there is little regulatory oversight.
3. Organic safeguards
• Unlike conventional production, the application of raw manure on organic crops is strictly regulated and sewage sludge is prohibited. Most organic manure is composted prior to application, a practice that greatly reduces risk and enhances environmental protection.
• “I am a compliance officer. The USDA has looked into our farmers’ composting practices—even on our smallest farm—they do check if things are not documented. Details ARE looked at. I can prove this because of an USDA audit we had that covered this issue,” said Cissy Bowman, a long-time organic certification expert based in Indiana.
• It should be noted that regardless of scale, all organic food has a mandatory audit trail required, so trace-back in the event of food contamination or questions of certification is possible. This mandatory audit trail does not exist for conventional food.
4. Organic and local — an antidote for the problems of industrial farming
• Furthermore, concentrating much of the nation’s food supply in any given region, and the exponential increase in imports from developing countries, puts our nation’s food security and health at risk.
• There is no reason why spinach cannot be grown, much of the year, as is now being done by small and medium-sized producers in the Midwest and throughout much of the Northeast. The only reason that this is not being done on a larger scale is artificial economies, subsidies and compromises in quality in an unbridled effort to produce cheaper and cheaper food in this country.
• There has been exponential growth in direct-marketing by farmers at roadside stands, farmers markets, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farms and organic farms. It adds great meaning for many consumers to buy organic food directly from the families who produce it, with loving care. These farm families need to be protected from any fallout in the marketplace that might occur due to the practices of large industrial farms in California.
Read More: E. coli Outbreak and Our Contaminated Food Supply
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September 26th, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
The FDA has closed in on the E. coli-contaminated spinach that has caused 175 cases of illness (including 28 cases of hemolytic uremic syndrome), 93 hospitalizations and one death.
The spinach implicated in the current E. coli outbreak was grown in three California counties: Monterey, San Benito and Santa Clara. Spinach grown outside of these regions has not been implicated in the outbreak.
According to the FDA: “The public can be confident that spinach grown in the non-implicated areas can be consumed. Consumers are advised not to purchase or consume fresh spinach if they cannot verify that it was grown in areas other than the three California counties implicated in the outbreak.”
Growers are working on getting spinach from other areas back on the market. But Dr. David Acheson of the FDA’s Food Safety Division says they need to figure out how to alert consumers to fresh spinach’s origins before it appears in the produce aisle.
As cited in previous OrganicAuthority.com articles, processed spinach (frozen and canned) is not implicated in this outbreak, nor is any other vegetable.
Recall Update
Last Friday, Pacific Coast Fruit Co. of Portland, Oregon, initiated a voluntary recall of products that may include spinach supplied by Natural Selections Foods of San Juan Bautista, California. The recalled products are: Baby Spring Mix Salad Kit (4.6 lbs); Chef on the Run Bacon Spinach Salad (9 oz. plus 2 fl. oz. dressing); Chef on the Run Spring Greens Salad (5 oz. plus 2 fl. oz. dressing); Chef on the Run Willamette Valley Salad (10 oz. plus 2 fl. oz. dressing); Trader Joe’s Baby Spinach and Greens with Bleu Cheese, Candied Pecans and Cranberries with Raspberry Vinaigrette Dressing (10 oz.); Trader Joe’s Baby Greens and Spinach Salad with Wild Maine Blueberry Dressing (10 oz.); Mediterranean Veggie Blend Kit – 15 lbs; and My Brothers Pizza Spinach and Garlic (15 oz. and 36 oz.).
Most of the salad products can be identified by the labels Trader Joe’s, My Brothers Pizza or Chef on the Run and are in clamshell containers. Pizza products are in round cardboard bottoms with a plastic overwrap. All salad products will have a “Use by” date on or before Sept. 20. Pizza products have a “Use by” date on or before Sept. 23.
The products were distributed through various retail outlets in Alaska, Oregon, Washington and Idaho.
Also on Friday, Triple B Corp., doing business as S.T. Produce, of Seattle, Washington, initiated a voluntary recall of its fresh spinach salad products with a “Use by” date of Aug. 22 through Sept. 20. Spinach used in these products may have been supplied from Natural Selections Foods. The recalled products were distributed in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana to retail stores and delis and are sold in plastic clamshell containers.
The S.T. Produce products recalled are: NWG Spinach Salad (5 oz.); Spinach Salad, QFC (5 oz.); Charlie’s Spinach Salad (5 oz.); Charlie’s Tabouli & Goat Cheese Salad (10 oz.); NWG Tabouli & Goat Cheese Salad (10 oz.); Tabouli & Goat Cheese Salad, QFC (10 oz.); T/H Spring Mix Salad (5.5 oz.); T/H Mozzarella Spring Mix Salad (5.5 oz.); T/H Baby Spinach Salad (5.5 oz.); Walnut and Blue Cheese Salad with Grilled Chicken Breast (6.5 oz.); Larry’s Market Tabouli & Goat Cheese Salad (10 oz.); Charlie’s Seasonal Greens Salad (2.5 oz.); Charlie’s Seasonal Greens Salad (4 oz.); Charlie’s Baby Spinach Salad (6 oz.); Charlie’s Baby Spinach Salad (5 oz.); and Caesar Bowtie Noodle Salad Kit with Grilled Chicken Breast (6.9 lbs).
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September 25th, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
Spinach and bagged salads are not the only culprits in E. coli outbreaks. When cooking with organic (or nonorganic) foods, follow these precautions issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):
Cook ground beef and hamburger thoroughly. Because ground beef can turn brown before disease-causing bacteria are killed, use a digital instant-read meat thermometer to ensure thorough cooking. Ground beef should be cooked until a thermometer inserted into several parts of the patty, including the thickest part, reads at least 160º F. Persons who cook ground beef without using a thermometer can decrease their risk of illness by not eating ground beef patties that are still pink in the middle.
If you are served an undercooked hamburger or other ground beef product in a restaurant, send it back for further cooking. You may want to ask for a new bun and a clean plate, too.
Avoid spreading harmful bacteria in your kitchen. Keep raw meat separate from ready-to-eat foods. Wash hands, counters and utensils with hot, soapy water after they touch raw meat. Never place cooked hamburgers or ground beef on the unwashed plate that held raw patties. Wash meat thermometers in between tests of patties that require further cooking.
Drink only pasteurized milk, juice or cider. Commercial juice with an extended shelf-life that is sold at room temperature (juice in cardboard boxes, vacuum-sealed juice in glass containers) has been pasteurized, although this is generally not indicated on the label. Juice concentrates are also heated sufficiently to kill pathogens.
Wash fruits and vegetables thoroughly, especially those that will not be cooked. Children 5 years and younger, immunocompromised persons and the elderly should avoid eating alfalfa sprouts until their safety can be assured. Methods to decontaminate alfalfa seeds and sprouts are being investigated.
Drink municipal water that has been treated with chlorine or other effective disinfectants.
Avoid swallowing lake or pool water while swimming.
Make sure that persons with diarrhea, especially children, wash their hands carefully with soap after bowel movements to reduce the risk of spreading infection, and that persons wash hands after changing soiled diapers. Anyone with a diarrheal illness should avoid swimming in public pools or lakes, sharing baths with others and preparing food for others.
OrganicAuthority.com will continue to provide updates through this blog as part of our commitment to organic living.
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Read More: Preventing E. Coli Infection
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September 22nd, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
Some consumers erroneously believe pesticide use would protect the public from an E. coli outbreak.
“I do not know of any pesticides, used in appropriate concentrations, that would kill E. coli O157:H7,” says Carolyn Hovde Bohach, PhD, a professor of microbiology at the University of Idaho.
So, what, exactly, is the problem?
“First of all, just for some perspective, the spinach is not to blame,” says Michael Greger, MD, director of public health and animal agriculture for the Farm Animal Welfare Division of The Humane Society of the United States. “E. coli is an intestinal bug, and plants don’t have intestines. Any diseases found on produce likely came from contamination with livestock fecal material. Our intensive confinement system of industrialized animal agriculture produces more than 1 billion tons of manure each year in the United States—the weight of 10,000 Nimitz-class aircraft carriers. We crowd billions of animals a year into these crowded, stressful, filthy conditions. No wonder we are plagued with the increasingly common emergence of infectious foodborne disease. Factory farms are a public health menace. We shouldn’t have to cook the crap out of our food.
“There is no significant difference in fecal contamination between certified organic and conventional produce, according to a study published by University of Minnesota researchers in 2004,” Dr. Greger continues. “There is a misconception that manure is only spread on organic crops. Raw manure and even toxic sewer sludge are spread on conventional crops, whereas the use of raw manure is strictly regulated in organic production, and sewer sludge is not allowed.”
One of the key words in Dr. Greger’s comments is “certified” organic.
Growers can contaminate produce if they use improperly composted manure or manure teas as fertilizers, Dr. Bohach explains. This strain of E. coli, she says, “can live in raw manure for more than 21 months and can survive in manure through freeze thaws and through hot weather. It is very dangerous to use improperly composted manures. Likewise, it is very dangerous to eat fresh vegetables that have been irrigated with manure-contaminated water or from fields that have flooded with runoff from cattle farms.”
Dr. Bohach notes that pathogens are killed when manure is properly composted.
Our Complete Coverage (Chronological)
Spinach and E. Coli Outbreak
Spinach Woes
Shopping for Bagged Greens
Is It Safe to Eat Frozen Spinach?
Read More: Organic Farming and E. Coli Outbreak
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September 21st, 2006 - Barbara Feiner
After reading my recent blog posts, my mother emailed to ask if frozen spinach is safe. And last night, while I was shopping at Trader Joe’s, a woman was returning a bag of frozen spinach “just to play it safe.”
If you’ve missed eating spinach over the last week, here’s how you can get your organic food fix. The FDA has officially stated: “At this time, FDA has no evidence that frozen spinach, canned spinach and spinach included in pre-made meals manufactured by food companies are affected.” (These products are cooked before they’re packaged.)
The Latest Statistics
The most recent FDA update:
- We’re now at 146 cases of illness due to E. coli infection, including 23 cases of hemolytic uremic syndrome, 76 hospitalizations and one death. Illnesses continue to be reported to the CDC.
- Arizona and Colorado have been added to the list of states with confirmed cases. There are now 23 affected states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
- The New Mexico Department of Health announced it has linked a sample from a package of spinach with a patient’s illness. The package that tested positive was Dole Baby Spinach, Best if Used by Aug. 30.
- The FDA advises consumers to avoid eating fresh spinach or products that contain fresh spinach until further notice. Fresh spinach includes bagged spinach, spinach in a clamshell and loose spinach purchased from retail establishments (supermarkets, restaurants and farmer’s markets).
Another Recall
On Tuesday, RLB Food Distributors of West Caldwell, New Jersey, initiated a voluntary recall of certain salad products that may contain spinach with an “Enjoy Thru” date of 9/20/06.
Products recalled are Balducci’s Mesclun Mix 5 oz., Balducci’s Organic Baby Spinach 5 oz., Balducci’s Mixed Greens 5 oz., FreshPro Mesclun Mix 5 oz. , FreshPro Organic Baby Spinach 5 oz., FreshPro Mixed Greens 5 oz., FreshPro Salad Mix with Italian Dressing 4.75 oz. and FreshPro Salad Mix with Ranch Dressing 5.25 oz.
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Read More: Is It Safe to Eat Frozen Spinach?
Tags: ecoli, frozen spinach, spinach, vegetables Posted in Organic Food | 3 Comments »
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