E. Coli And The Centralization of the Food Industry

September 28th, 2006

The San Francisco Chronicle ran an article detailing the issues that mass food production has caused – in this case, the easy spread of a single E. Coli outbreak from a local contamination to a national outbreak:

TECHNOLOGY, EATING HABITS HELP TO SPREAD E. COLI
By Erin Allday San Francisco Chronicle
September 23, 2006

In the spring and summer of 1982, McDonald’s held a special promotion—- two burgers for the price of one—- that led to the first reported outbreak of a food-borne bacterial infection that now sweeps the nation with some regularity.

That year, at least 47 people in Oregon and Michigan, most of whom took advantage of the promotion, fell ill with severe abdominal cramps and bloody diarrhea. Doctors and public health investigators were spooked—- they’d never seen anything like it.

A year later, after months of investigation by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, investigators were able to identify the infection. It was a common bacterium, one that microbiologists had long known to live in human intestinal tracts with mostly harmless, and sometimes even helpful, results.

The bacterium was E. coli, but this was a rare strain that had mutated. It had attached itself to a virus, and that virus made people very sick. Today, that same strain, called 0157:H7, sickens hundreds if not thousands of Americans every year, and is the source of the latest epidemic linked to bagged fresh spinach that has sickened 166 people so far, one of whom died.

“At the time of that (1982) outbreak, there was no knowledge that E. coli could cause a disease like this, so nobody believed it,” said Lee Riley, a professor of infectious disease and epidemiology at UC Berkeley who was one of the lead investigators for the CDC in the McDonald’s case and an author of the first paper published on E. coli in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“The outbreak occurred because the restaurants were having these promotions and going through a lot of hamburgers,” Riley said. “It’s the mass consumption of meat and the way it’s processed and delivered and distributed that made it possible for this E. coli to spread.”

Escherichia coli is found in everyone’s body. It can be helpful—- it kills off other harmful bacteria, for example—- but mostly it just sits there and doesn’t do much. Certain less-benign strains of E. coli are known to be the most common cause of urinary tract infections among women.

The first noted case of 0157:H7 actually dates back to 1975, when a woman at Alameda Naval Air Station became mysteriously sick. Doctors at the time couldn’t diagnose what ailed her, but they noted the rare E. coli found in her body and sent a sample to the CDC. When the 1982 outbreak occurred, investigators used that sample as further proof that E. coli was responsible for the sickness in the McDonald’s cases.

Public health officials say it’s impossible to know how long E. coli 0157:H7 has been around. People probably were sickened by it for years, or even decades, before doctors identified it.

But the reason outbreaks have become more common in the past 25 years, health officials agree, is because technology has been developed to identify and connect strains of bacteria and because the nation’s eating habits have changed—we eat mass-processed foods that make it easier for contaminated products to reach more people.

Over the years, technology has become increasingly complex as federal health officials searched for ways to identify outbreaks more quickly. The technique used today, known as PulseNet, allows microbiologists to track the “paternity” of a unique strain of 0157:H7, and, thereby, tell if isolated cases that appear around the country are connected, said Dr. David Acheson, chief medical officer with the federal Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition at the Food and Drug Administration.

The first E. coli outbreaks in the United States were in ground beef partly because E. coli bacteria live in cows, and partly because ground beef was among the first food products to be highly processed and mass-distributed via fast-food outlets. Beef from one tainted cow could be mixed with beef from hundreds of healthy cows, and the resulting hamburger patties would all be contaminated.

The nation has endured a handful of outbreaks since 1982—- including one notable outbreak involving hundreds of people who ate at Jack in the Box in 1993—- but the meat and fast-food industries have adopted policies over the years that make such cases more unusual now.

But in the 1990s, the source of the outbreaks spread to fruit and vegetables. In the past decade there have been 20 such outbreaks, including the most recent one. The last nine outbreaks involved leafy greens that were packaged into salad mixes.

Those salad mixes have become increasingly popular as Americans, told they need to eat more vegetables, jumped at the convenience of prewashed lettuce and spinach. But the problem with those mixes is the same problem the meat industry ran into—- a very small amount of contaminated vegetable can spread the E. coli bacteria to hundreds or thousands of packages when it’s mixed in a processing plant. That was the case with bagged spinach.

“Spinach is brought in from many, many farms,” Riley said. “So you have an opportunity for a lot of bagged spinach to become contaminated. It’s just a massive spread of E. coli, even if the original contamination was limited to one farm.”

With meat, solving the problem meant simply cooking it at a high enough temperature to kill the bacteria. But raw vegetables may prove more challenging because there’s not a lot that can be done once the produce has been contaminated. Washing produce isn’t necessarily enough to get rid of E. coli.

For now, federal and state investigators are searching farms in the Salinas Valley for clues as to what caused the contamination in spinach. But they may never know the answer. And to some degree, bacteria are always going to be living in our food supply.

“We live in a microbial world,” said Sam Beattie, a food safety extension specialist at Iowa State University. “Any time you go out into an agricultural field, can you really expect it to be a sterile environment? I don’t think so.”

The consolodation of the food market into the hands of one or two players – in this case, most of the nation’s spinach being produced in Salinas Valley, CA - can lead to massive outbreaks. It does need to be stated, however that federal inspection agencies have little to no power to halt such outbreaks before they happen.

(Thanks to A.V. Krebs’ Agribusiness Examiner #458.)

  • Sousy

DSM Register: beneath contempt

September 25th, 2006

Okay, so I open my Sunday NY Times and find this piece of actual reporting:

Spy Agencies Say Iraq War Worsens Terrorism Threat
A stark assessment of terrorism trends by American intelligence agencies has found that the American invasion and occupation of Iraq has helped spawn a new generation of Islamic radicalism and that the overall terrorist threat has grown since the Sept. 11 attacks.

The classified National Intelligence Estimate attributes a more direct role to the Iraq war in fueling radicalism than that presented either in recent White House documents or in a report released Wednesday by the House Intelligence Committee, according to several officials in Washington involved in preparing the assessment or who have read the final

Then I open my DSM Register the next morning, and this is how the newspaper Iowa Depends on covers the story:

Dems jump on report linking war to terrorism
WASHINGTON – Democrats yesterday seized on an intelligence assessment that said the Iraq war has increased the terrorist threat, saying it was further evidence that Americans should choose new leadership in the November elections.

The Democrats hoped the report would undermine the GOP’s image as the party more capable of handing terrorism as the campaign enters its final six-week stretch.

That’s the way the Des Moines Register works. They don’t cover the story; they cover the spin. After all, what Democrats say about the report is far more important than, um, national security.

$%#@*&!

Not that I am accusing the Register of bias. I certainly wouldn’t do that after the paper lead last Saturday with the results of a mock poll that had McCain and Guiliani outpolling John Edwards by a few meaningless mock points over two years before the election. And that’s LEAD, as in this completely non-news story is the most important thing of the day. And I certainly wouldn’t accuse the paper of spinning instead of reporting when last week it LEAD with a poll showing Iowans had upped their approval ratings of Bush by a few meaningless percentage points (which were well within the poll’s margin of error).

That’s LEAD, mind you; that’s splash a poll result all over the front page and call it news. That’s report a story of national importance as if it were so much partisan squabbling while elsewhere the paper’s editors hypocritically dole out a rose to an Iowa candidate who resigned his party rather than engage in partisan squabbling.

I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again: you can learn a lot from a newspaper if you read it with the proper contempt, but the Register is sadly beneath contempt anymore. It’s now just a hack paper floundering to get suburbanites to read it by covering football tailgating parties, drunken bike rides, and Oprah-esque abuse stories.

Yeesh.

  • profo

The American Media: In Pictures

September 25th, 2006

Thanks to Rising Hegemon (Hi, Scooter!) – is a good example of what’s wrong with the American media. Which of these things is not like the other?

  • Sousy

Filpside of Illegal Immigration, Part II

September 22nd, 2006

Via Confined Space is an example of why companies fight hard to continue hiring illegal employees – and lobbying to avoid responsibility for doing so.

He broke a rib and injured a kidney, and his right lung collapsed. He also hit his head on the floor, severely injuring his brain’s frontal lobe, which controls language, memory and motor function.

Ruiz was in a coma, able to breathe only with a ventilator.

His younger brother, Jose, left his wife, two young children and his job in Mexico and rushed to Charlotte.

Ruiz’s wife followed, with a temporary pass to enter the country, leaving her three children behind. When she arrived at Carolinas Medical Center, she found the Virgin of Guadalupe medal in her husband’s hand.

Nurses were hoping for a miracle, but at Belk Masonry, a counterattack had begun.

The Companion Property & Casualty Insurance Co. paid his initial medical bills, but adjusters wanted to know all about Francisco Ruiz. When they discovered his illegal work status, they rejected his claim.

The law in North Carolina, as in most states, says that illegal immigrants who are hurt on the job are entitled to compensation. Companies, the law says, must pay injury benefits to “every person engaged in employment … whether lawfully or unlawfully employed.”

But officials at Companion Property & Casualty questioned the law’s intent. Why should they pay an alien who lied about his immigration status to get his job? How could an illegal worker technically be considered an employee?

Mr. Ruiz took the company to court and won. Of course, the workers comp company president defended the refusal to pay for medical care:

The company was disappointed but not surprised.

“We’re always viewed as the deep pocket,” said Companion President Charles Potok. “If you’re talking about paying somebody or cutting someone off cold, we typically lose.”

Of course, there is no mention of responsibility on the part of the Belk Masonry Co. – Mr. Ruiz’ employer.

Thom Hartmann comments on why companies fight to hire illegal immigrants in the first place.

  • Sousy

Iowa GOP Forces Own Candidate Out Of Party

September 19th, 2006

It seems that the Iowa GOP leaders in Des Moines decided to “help” with a campaign in southern Iowa – in a way so disgusting that it forced their canddiate to drop out of the party and declare himself to be an Independent.

Kevin Wiskus, a candidate for Iowa House District 94, has switched his party affiliation from Republican to Independent following what he said was a “shocking and tasteless” mass-mailed brochure attacking his opponent.

The move, he said, was in response to a brochure from the Republican Party of Iowa attacking current state Rep. Kurt Swaim, D-Bloomfield.

“I do not support any kind of attack campaign tactics,” Wiskus said. “Voters should be able to choose between qualified candidates based on individual merits. At no time should voters have to make a choice based on which candidate can throw the most mud.

“Though I had no prior knowledge of this vicious attack on you, I ask that you please accept my most sincere and humble apology to you and Julie,” he wrote in an ad to appear in the Centerville Daily Iowegian.
...
“You deserve an apology from the Republican Party,” begins Wiskus’ ad in the Daily Iowegian. “Since he will not get an apology from the Republican Party of Iowa, I would like to apologize to Kurt.”

Mr. Wiskus appears to be a rarity in modern politics: someone who values personal integrity over partisan attack politics. The Iowa GOP flyer accused the incumbent Democrat Kurt Swain for being “soft on crime”, highlighting Mr. Swain’s record as a public defender (where he had the duty to defend “sex offenders”) and for voting for a bill sponsored by Republicans, of all things.

Statehouse candidate denounces brochure

Of course, on WOI radio, the chair of the Iowa GOP referred to the brochure as “voter education” – apparently missing out on the idea that a decision made in Des Moines wasn’t well recieved in the rural counties.

  • Sousy


Digg!

Jeff Lamberti On The Issues

September 5th, 2006

.... or at least, copying them from the political consultants back pocket.

The answers were so good, Republican candidates wanted to use them as their own. The embarrassment was at least seven did.

Republicans in House races copied their party’s talking points and included parts of the answers as their own for an AARP survey. The answers related to Medicare, Social Security, insurance plans and retirement.

Candidates in Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, South Carolina and Texas all submitted the sometimes word-for-word responses, which originated with the National Republican Congressional Committee.
....
Among the candidates who used the borrowed language were Andrea Zinga and Peter Roskam, both running in Illinois, Jeff Lamberti in Iowa, Chuck Blasdel in Ohio and Max Burns in Georgia.

Link: from Forbes Magazine.

  • Sousy

    Digg!


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