In the 16th session in the second series of assessments of
Healthy People 2010, Acting Assistant Secretary for Health Donald
Wright chaired a focus area Progress Review on Food Safety. He was assisted by
staff of the co-lead agencies for this Healthy People 2010 focus area,
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food Safety
and Inspection Service (FSIS). Also participating in the review were
representatives from other offices and agencies within HHS and USDA. Dr. Wright
observed that food safety, a top priority for both HHS and USDA, is an
expansive issue that continues to present challenges as we approach the 2010
guidepost. Unfortunately, many people do not think seriously about food safety
until a food-related illness affects them or one of their family members.
The complete November 2000 text for the Food Safety focus area of
Healthy People 2010 is available online at www.healthypeople.gov/document/html/volume1/10food.htm.
Revisions to the focus area chapter that were made after the January 2005
Midcourse Review are available at
www.healthypeople.gov/data/midcourse/html/focusareas/fa10toc.htm.
Additional data used in the Progress Review for this focus area's objectives
and their detailed definitions can be accessed at
wonder.cdc.gov/data2010.
For comparison with the current state of the focus area, the report on the
first-round Progress Review (held on May 11, 2004) is archived at
www.healthypeople.gov/data/2010prog/focus10/2004fa10.htm.
The meeting agenda, tabulated data for all focus area objectives, charts, and
other materials used in the Progress Review can be found at a companion site
maintained by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National
Center for Health Statistics (NCHS):
www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/otheract/hpdata2010/focusareas/fa10-food2.htm.
Data Trends
In his overview of data for the focus area, NCHS Director Edward
Sondik outlined the annual burden of foodborne disease in the United States.
Although the food supply in this country is one of the safest in the world, an
estimated 76 million U.S. consumers get sick each year from foodborne
illness—more than 300,000 consumers are hospitalized, and the yearly
death toll approaches 5,000. The cost to society is around $23 billion
annually. Objectives in the Food Safety focus area provide a framework for
reducing foodborne illness through prevention, intervention, and response to
adverse incidents. To better ensure the safety of food, FDA and FSIS monitor
various points along the path from foodstuffs to table: production, processing,
distribution and storage, transportation, retailing of food products,
preparation of meals, and consumption. Of the objectives and subobjectives in
the focus area that were continued after the Midcourse Review of Healthy
People 2010, two have met or exceeded their targets, six are improving,
three are getting worse, two have shown little or no progress, nine are without
data for measuring progress, and one remains in developmental status. Dr.
Sondik examined in greater detail the objectives in the focus area.
(Objs. 10-1a, -1b, -1c, -1d, -1f): The rate of
infection by Campylobacter species (spp.) decreased from 24.6 cases
per 100,000 population in 1997 to 12.7 cases per 100,000 in 2005. The 2010
target is 12.3 per 100,000. Cases of Escherichia coli (E.
coli) O157:H7 decreased from 2.1 per 100,000 in 1997 to 1.1 per 100,000 in
2005. The target is 1.0 per 100,000. Cases of
Listeriamonocytogenes decreased from 0.47 per 100,000 in 1997
to 0.30 per 100,000 in 2005. The target is 0.24 per 100,000. Cases of
Salmonella spp. increased from 13.6 per 100,000 in 1997 to 14.5 per
100,000 in 2005. In the years between 1997 and 2005, there was considerable
fluctuation in the rate, with no clear trend toward improvement. The target is
6.8 per 100,000. Cases of postdiarrheal hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) among
children less than 5 years of age decreased from 1.80 per 100,000 in 2000 to
1.04 per 100,000 in 2004. The target is 0.90 per 100,000. Two-thirds of the
deaths from foodborne illness in the United States are associated with the
bacteria addressed by these subobjectives, in estimated proportions as follows:
Salmonella spp., 30.6 percent; Listeria monocytogenes, 27.6
percent; Campylobacter spp., 5.5 percent; and E. coli O157:H7, 2.9
percent.
(Objs. 10-2a, -2b): A foodborne disease outbreak
is defined as the occurrence of two or more cases of a similar illness
resulting from the ingestion of a common food. In 2005, 26 outbreaks of E.
coli O157:H7 were reported to CDC, an increase from 22 in 1997. The target
is 11. Outbreaks of Salmonella serotype Enteritidis decreased from 44
reported to CDC in 1997 to 39 in 2005. The target is 22. For both
subobjectives, there was considerable fluctuation in the number of reported
outbreaks in the years between 1997 and 2005.
(Objs. 10-3a, -3b, -3c, -3d): The subparts of
this objective are aimed at holding at no increase above the 1997 levels the
proportion of non–Typhi Salmonella spp. isolates from humans
that are resistant to specific antimicrobial drugs. The proportion of such
isolates from humans that were resistant to Fluoroquinolones increased from 0.0
percent in 1997 to 0.2 percent in 2003. The target is 0.0 percent. The
proportion of such isolates from humans that were resistant to third-generation
Cephalosporins increased from 0.1 percent in 1997 to 0.4 percent in 2003. The
target is 0.0 percent. The proportion of such isolates from humans that were
resistant to Gentamicin decreased from 2.9 percent in 1997 to 1.4 percent in
2003, surpassing the target of 3 percent. The proportion of such isolates from
humans that were resistant to Ampicillin decreased from 18.3 percent in 1997 to
13.6 percent in 2003, surpassing the target of 18 percent.
(Obj. 10-4b): The proportion of adults aged 18
years and older with food allergy diagnosis who had suffered severe allergic
reactions to food within the preceding five years increased from 26 percent in
2001 to 29.3 percent in 2006. The target is 21 percent. In 2006, the
proportions among affected adult populations that experienced such reactions
were 27.9 percent among males, 30.0 percent among females, 21.6 percent among
whites, and 50.5 percent among blacks. In the age group 18 to 59 years, 31.4
percent of persons with food allergies had experienced severe allergic
reactions to food, compared with 23.4 percent of those aged 60 and older.
(Obj. 10-5): The proportion of the
non-institutionalized consumer population aged 18 years and older that
observed four key food safety practices with regard to cleaning, separating,
cooking, and chilling increased from 73 percent in 1998 to 76 percent in 2006.
The target is 79 percent for all groups. By gender, race, and level of
education attained, the proportions that followed these practices in 2006 can
be broken out as follows: females, 78 percent; males, 73 percent; blacks, 74
percent; whites, 77 percent; less than high school completion, 77 percent; high
school graduates, 75 percent; and at least some college, 76 percent.
Key Challenges and Current Strategies
In presentations that followed the data overview, the principal
themes were introduced by Janice Oliver, Deputy Director, FDA Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN), and David Goldman, Assistant
Administrator, FSIS Office of Public Health Science. Their statements and
Progress Review briefing materials identified a number of barriers to achieving
the objectives, as well as activities under way to meet these challenges,
including the following:
Barriers
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With the aging of the U.S. population, a greater percentage of
people is now susceptible to foodborne illness, and that percentage will
increase. In 2007, an estimated 20 to 25 percent of the population was
considered to be in a high-risk category—young, older, pregnant, or
immuno-compromised—and subject to serious illness or death from foodborne
pathogens. Concurrent with this trend is the increase over the last few decades
in the number and variety of agents associated with foodborne illness.
-
It is difficult to assess how common foodborne illness is. The
majority of foodborne illness cases are sporadic, and only the small number
identified as being part of an outbreak are reported by State health
departments to CDC through that Agency's Electronic Foodborne Outbreak
Reporting System (eFORS). FoodNet (see item in next section) collects
information on foodborne diseases caused by nine pathogens (bacterial and
parasitic) and one syndrome (HUS), but does not conduct active surveillance for
viruses, which are considered to be a major cause of foodborne
illness.
-
After several decades of antimicrobial drug use,
multidrug-resistant bacterial pathogens are emerging that are less responsive
to treatment. Of particular concern are non-Typhi Salmonella strains
from humans that are demonstrating emerging resistance to the newest
antibiotics, such as fluoroquinolones and third-generation cephalosporins.
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Pregnant women run a serious risk of becoming ill from
Listeria, which can cause miscarriage, fetal death, or illness or
death of a newborn. Consuming contaminated raw milk or milk products made from
raw milk, such as cheese, during pregnancy can harm the fetus even without
inducing obvious symptoms of illness in the mother.
-
In the United States, allergenic proteins found in the
following eight foods cause an estimated 90 percent of allergic reactions from
foods: milk, eggs, fish, wheat, tree nuts, peanuts, soybeans, and shellfish.
The presence of allergens in food can be life threatening for certain
individuals. Currently, there is no cure for food allergies, and the only
successful method of management is avoidance of foods containing the allergen.
Death certificates show about 20 U.S. deaths from food-induced anaphylaxis
annually, but research indicates the expected number would be around
125.
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Continuous high employee turnover rates in retail-level food
establishments create an environment that is not conducive to maintaining a
well-trained workforce with food safety knowledge in areas such as food
temperature control, food preparation practices, personal hygiene, and employee
health.
Activities and Outcomes
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FoodNet is a population-based active surveillance system that
is designed to determine more precisely the burden and severity of foodborne
diseases and attribute that burden to specific foods and settings. FoodNet is a
collaborative project of CDC, FDA, FSIS, and certain State health departments.
Since its creation in 1996, FoodNet has expanded the surveillance population
from five States, representing 5 percent of the U.S. population, to 10 States,
representing 15 percent of the population.
-
Launched in 2007 and integrated with the Administration's
broader Import Safety Action Plan, FDA's Food Protection Plan addresses both
food safety and food defense for domestic and imported products. The Plan
operates through a set of strategies that focus on risks over a product's life
cycle from production to consumption, target resources to achieve maximum risk
reduction, address both unintentional and deliberate contamination, and use
science and modern technology systems. The Plan comprises three core elements
of protection: preventing foodborne illnesses in the first place, intervening
with risk-based FDA actions at critical points in the food supply chain, and
responding rapidly when contaminated food or feed is detected. Many of the FDA
actions build on existing partnerships with stakeholders and other partners,
such as Federal, State, local, and foreign government agencies. For more
information about the Plan, visit the Web site:
www.fda.gov/oc/initiatives/advance/food/plan.html.
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On December 11, 2007, HHS and a counterpart agency of the
People's Republic of China signed a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) that
establishes a bilateral mechanism to ensure products imported into the United
States from China meet standards for quality and safety. Under terms of the
MOA, the Chinese government will implement registration and certification
requirements, expand information-sharing, and provide U.S. officials improved
access to production facilities. The Chinese agency has a Web site at
english.aqsiq.gov.cn.
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Approximately 7,500 inspection and veterinary personnel of
FSIS inspect products that represent more than one-third of all consumer
spending on food in the United States and about 40 percent of all domestic food
production. For more information about FSIS, go to
www.fsis.usda.gov.
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Following an increased number of positive tests for E.
coli O157:H7 in beef and a larger number of illnesses caused by this
pathogen in recent years, FSIS announced in October 2007 that it would take new
actions to protect the public against this threat. As of November 2007, all
beef-handling plants are expected to verify that they are effectively
controlling E. coli O157:H7 during slaughter and processing according
to FSIS-provided minimum criteria. To ensure more rapid recalls, FSIS is now
taking into account a broader, more complete range of evidence when determining
whether to seek a recall or take regulatory action. Also, FSIS notified foreign
countries that export raw beef products into the United States of the new
E. coli O157:H7 policies and programs and is working with those
countries to ensure they implement equivalent measures. In addition, beginning
in January 2008, FSIS will undertake routine, targeted sampling for E.
coli O157:H7 at slaughter and grinding facilities, with larger volume
operations to be tested more frequently than in the past.
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Begun in 2005, the Strategic Partnership Program Agroterrorism
Initiative was formed by USDA, FDA, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS),
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) as a collaboration with States
and private industry to protect the Nation's food supply from terrorist
threats. As part of the Initiative, FSIS and FDA have completed more than a
dozen food supply vulnerability assessments, which are updated periodically. To
prepare industry to protect the domestic food supply from an intentional
attack, FSIS has provided training to more than 700 trade group representatives
across the country.
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In February 2007, FSIS announced a proposed timetable for
introducing a more robust, risk-based inspection system in processing plants.
As part of a strategy to place resources where the greatest need exists, FSIS
intends to assess the relative risk of the products of each plant and identify
steps the plant is taking to control such risks in its operations. This will
allow FSIS to allocate inspection resources more effectively while continuing
daily inspection at all processing facilities.
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FDA and FSIS have implemented the Hazard Analysis and Critical
Control (HACCP) system regulations for seafood (1997), meat and poultry
(1998–2000), and juice products (2002). HACCP is an internationally
recognized, scientific approach to producing safer food by anticipating how
biological, chemical, or physical hazards are most likely to occur and
following up with the installation of appropriate measures to prevent their
occurrence.
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Effective January 1, 2006, FDA required food labels to state
clearly if food products contain any ingredients that contain protein derived
from the eight major allergenic foods. Such labeling should be especially
helpful to children, who need to learn to recognize the presence of substances
they must avoid.
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A nationwide food safety campaign called Be Food
Safe, which includes print and broadcast notices, was launched in
September 2006 at the Food Safety Education Conference, co-sponsored by FSIS.
This new educational mass media campaign gives educators the tools to inform
consumers about foodborne illness and raise awareness of the dangers associated
with improper handling and undercooking of food. A new quarterly food safety
magazine, Be FoodSafe: The FSIS Magazine was also announced at the
same conference.
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For over 10 years, USDA, FDA, and CDC have served as the
Federal liaisons to The Partnership for Food Safety Education, the
public/private partnership that created the Fight BAC! Campaign. This national
program emphasizes the four basic safe food handling behaviors: Clean,
Separate, Cook, and Chill. These behaviors are the basis of the questions from
the Food Safety Survey that are used in Healthy People 2010 to measure
changes in consumer food safety practices. FDA is issuing a new series of brief
consumer publications, Food Facts From FDA, that cover a variety of
food safety, nutrition, and food allergen issues.
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In accordance with a recommendation made at the first round
Progress Review in 2004, FDA made available a satellite broadcast on the
reduction of risk factors for foodborne illness at retail food establishments.
In interviews, various leaders in the regulatory community and industry
discussed success stories and tools used. Topics included communication skills,
using risk control plans, tools for improving food employee behaviors, food
preparation practices, personal hygiene of foodservice workers, and techniques
used to ensure safe food temperatures. A second broadcast is planned for
sometime in 2008 and will focus on the FDA Food Code provisions for
preventing the transmission of foodborne illness from employees who are
ill.
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Ask Karen is a Web-based communications tool that
FSIS introduced in April 2004 to provide automated responses to consumer
inquiries about safe handling, preparation, and storage of meat, poultry, and
egg products. Using an extensive database of food safety information, "Karen"
(www.askkaren.gov) is a
virtual representative available around the clock to display answers to
questions based on words typed by users of this feature.
Approaches for Consideration
Participants in the Progress Review made the following suggestions
for public health professionals and policymakers to consider as steps to enable
further progress toward achievement of the objectives for Food Safety:
-
Refine ongoing efforts and explore alternative methodologies
to more precisely estimate the total burden of foodborne illness on the U.S.
population.
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Expand to new States initiatives that encourage increased
individual and corporate responsibility among producers of foodstuffs for
ensuring the wholesomeness of the food supply.
-
Increase the use of information sharing and training
agreements with other countries to prevent proliferation of food pathogens at
the source of production and contamination of food products intended for
export.
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To better estimate the annual total of deaths from food
allergies, seek to disseminate more widely among health professional groups
information about coding for food allergy anaphylaxis in the International
Classification of Diseases.
-
Step up efforts to raise the level of attentiveness of retail
food purveyor staff to the necessity and means for preventing cross
contamination of food products.
-
Give greater attention to the implications for food safety of
the increase in the proportion of food retailed as organic, particularly with
respect to small-scale producers.
Contacts for information about Healthy People
2010 focus area 10—Food Safety:
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[Signed March 6, 2008] Donald Wright, M.D.,
M.P.H. Acting Assistant Secretary for Health
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