Salmonella Remains In The Spotlight
In January 2000, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) published Healthy People 2010, a 10-year agenda for improving our Nation’s health. The agenda included future goals relating to the overall reduction of foodborne illness. Fast forward 10 years, and we find that the agency’s goal regarding E. coli O157:H7 (“E. coli”) was met and actually exceeded. The target for Salmonella, however, was far from the mark.
HHS had hoped that, by 2010, there would be only 1 case of E. coli O157:H7 and 6.8 cases of Salmonella reported per 100,000 people. FoodNet data from 2009 showed the actual number of E. coli illnesses was .9 per 100,000, and Salmonella illnesses was 15.2 per 100,000. The actual number of Salmonella cases in 2009 was more than double the Healthy People 2010 goal.
Industry and government (and the media) have intensely focused on E. coli since 1993. The incredible result of that focus and determination is a 41% decrease of laboratory confirmed E. coli illnesses in the past ten years (per FoodNet). Now that the data on Salmonella is clear, and following directives made by the President’s Food Safety Working Group, the Food Safety and Inspection Service (“FSIS”) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) have indicated that more of their attention will be turned to Salmonella.
FSIS recently announced the implementation of more aggressive performance standards relating to the prevalence of Salmonella in chicken and turkey products. The new standards, set to take effect in July 2011, are projected by the USDA to reduce the numbers of foodborne illness in the United States by as many as 25,000 within two years.
The new standards reduce the acceptable levels of Salmonella to 7.5 percent in young chickens, which equates to a maximum allowable positive rate of 5 in 51 samples (and a slightly lower 4 in 51 samples for turkeys). The previous standard, in effect since 1996, allowed for a positive rate up to 20 percent.
Last summer, the FDA issued a much stricter food safety rule aimed at decreasing egg-related Salmonella illnesses. Under the new requirements, egg producers whose shell eggs are not processed with a treatment such as pasteurization must adopt new measures to prevent Salmonella contamination, conduct testing in the poultry house, and ensure proper refrigeration during storage and transportation.
The FDA expects the regulation to prevent approximately 79,000 cases of Salmonella each year. The FDA is also counting on new inspection powers and more funding under the Food Safety Modernization Act to factor into the success of the rule.
The HHS has set a more modest target for Salmonella in Healthy People 2020: 11.4 cases per 100,000 people. Hopefully, industry and regulator ingenuity can meet this challenge.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has announced that the 