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AMIF Urges CDC to Update Foodborne Illness Statistics
Friday, September 10, 2010
The American Meat Institute Foundation (AMIF) is strongly urging the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to revise decade-old foodborne illness statistics which are widely referenced by public health officials, regulatory agencies and congressional staff when discussing foodborne illnesses.
“In order to improve food safety and further
reduce the risk of foodborne illness, it is
absolutely critical to have the most accurate
estimation of foodborne disease as the cause of
illness, hospitalizations and deaths,” said
AMIF Director of Scientific Affairs
Data from the Mead et al.
“Food-Related Illness and Death in the
Untied States” report, published in
1999, estimates 76 million cases of
illness, 325,000 hospitalizations and 5,000
deaths per year are attributed to the
consumption of food products. However, the
recently released CDC analysis
of reported illnesses in
the U.S. for
2008 indicated approximately
100,000 illnesses for the same food-related
notifiable diseases. These
discrepancies may be caused by the fact that
the 1999 estimates were derived
using adjustments for underreporting of
foodborne illnesses, which are likely no longer
valid given the changes in public health
reporting over the past two decades. These
11-year old estimates also virtually ignore the
newer, more accurate and specific methods of
detecting microorganisms and the vast
improvements made by the food industry in
improving the safety of their products over the
last
decade.
AMI and the Foundation have been eagerly
awaiting the update to the Mead et al.
report, which has been in preparation since
before
2007.
Booren also reinforced how accurate and
timelier foodborne illness attribution data is
critically needed to improve the safety of the
http://www.meatami.com/ht/a/GetDocumentAction/i/62612



