There is a large burden of foodborne illness in the United States
with approximately 76 million people falling ill every year (that’s
1in 4 Americans) from largely preventable food contamination.
Fixing the problem is dependent on knowing where the problem starts
and which foods from what producers are making us sick.
Ultimately, then, the ability to control food poisoning starts with
the public health department and their ability to find out what a
person ate when they have a diagnosed case of foodborne disease.
Safe Tables Our Priority (S.T.O.P.) has been supporting victims of
foodborne illness for the last 16 years and has heard firsthand how
terribly inconsistent we are at interviewing and collecting this
vital information when people get sick from food. The public
health system can not find what it isn’t looking for or asking
about. Today, a survey is being released that will shed some
light on this important topic.
The survey was commissioned by the Produce Safety Project (PSP), an
initiative of the The Pew Charitable Trusts at Georgetown
University, and conducted by S.T.O.P. 39 of the 51 state and
DC health departments responded to our survey which asked about the
types of questions asked of foodborne illness victims, the time
frame in which they were completed, and how states collected,
stored, and shared the resulting 2007 data.
We learned some interesting things. Despite the increase in
large national outbreaks linked to fresh produce recently, our data
show that only 25 of 39 states asked victims about specific produce
items, even if that produce was associated with a large recent
outbreak. Only 23 of 39 states are able to electronically
link their foodborne illness intake data for analysis. The
lessons learned from this survey data will hopefully encourage
states to develop best practices, leading to better identification
of outbreaks and fewer illnesses and deaths.
To read the executive summary and
full report, visit www.producesafetyproject.org.
To sign up for S.T.O.P. E-alerts and get food recall and outbreak
information delivered to your email inbox, visit http://www.safetables.org/about/root_joinus.cfm
Original Post:
http://safetablesourpriority.blogspot.com/2009/10/produce-safety-project-and-stop-release.html
Food
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Produce Safety Project and S.T.O.P. Release Report on State Surveillance of Foodborne Illnesses
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