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If you have a problem with a food product...
Separate government agencies are responsible for protecting
different segments of the food supply. If you have experienced
a problem with a food product, be sure to contact the
appropriate public health organization. |
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For more help, call the USDA Meat & Poultry Hotline
For additional food safety information about meat, poultry, or egg products, call the toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 1-888-MPHotline (1-888-674-6854); for the hearing-impaired (TTY) 1-800-256-7072.
The Hotline is staffed by food safety experts weekdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern time. You can listen to food safety recordings 24 hours a day using a touch-tone phone.
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What can you do?
For Help With Meat, Poultry And Egg Products:
Call the toll-free
USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 1-888-MPHotline (1-888-674-6854).
For Help With Restaurant Food Problems:
Call the Health Department in your city, county or state.
View a complete listing of
State Departments of Public Health.
For Help With Non-Meat Food Products (Cereals,
Fish, Produce, Fruit Juice, Pastas, Cheeses, etc):
For complaints about food products which do not contain
meat or poultry -- such as cereal -- call or write to
the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Check your local
phone book under U.S. Government, Health and Human Services,
to find an FDA office in your area. The FDA's Center for
Food Safety and Applied Nutrition can be reached at 1-888-723-3366.
In order for the USDA to investigate a problem
with meat, poultry or egg products, you must have:
- The original container or packaging
- Any foreign object that you might have discovered
in the product
- Any uneaten portion of the food (refrigerate or
freeze it)
Information you should be ready to tell the
Hotline on the phone includes:
- Name, address and phone number;
- Brand name, product name and manufacturer of the
product
- The size and package type
- Can or package codes (not UPC bar codes) and dates
- Establishment number (EST) usually found in the
circle or shield near the "USDA passed and inspected"
phrase;
- Name and location of the store, as well as the date
that you purchased the product.
- You can complain to the store or the product's manufacturer
if you don't choose to make a formal complaint to
the USDA.
If you think you are ill, see a physician.
If an injury or illness allegedly resulted from use of
a meat or poultry product, you will also need to tell
the Hotline staff about the type, symptoms, time of occurrence
and name of attending health professional (if applicable).
The Bottom Line:
If you sense there's a problem with any food product,
don't consume it. "When in doubt, throw it out."
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Last Modified:
April 20, 2004 |
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