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AMI: U.S. Meat, Poultry Is Safe

A new Pew Commission-funded study misleads consumers about U.S. meat and poultry, which is among the safest in the world.

That’s the contention of the American Meat Institute, which said authors of the new study, which involved a small number of samples from retail stores, claim that their findings suggest that a significant public health risk exists.

“Despite the claims of this small study, consumers can feel confident that meat and poultry is safe,” said James Hodges, American Meat Institute Foundation president. “Federal data show that S. aureus infections in people that are caused by food are uncommon. CDC data also show that foodborne illnesses as a whole are declining due to our growing scientific knowledge about how to target and destroy bacteria on meat and poultry.”

AMI noted that federal data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows steady declines in foodborne illnesses linked to consumption of meat and poultry overall and indicate that human infections with Staphylococcus aureus comprise less than 1 percent of total foodborne illnesses.

“It is notable that the study involved only 136 samples of meat and poultry from 80 brands in 26 retail grocery stores in five U.S. cities,” AMI said in a statement. “This small sample is insufficient to reach the sweeping conclusions conveyed in a press release about the study. By contrast, when the U.S. Department of Agriculture studies the prevalence of bacteria, their work involves thousands of samples collected over long periods of time to ensure accuracy.”

While the study claims that the many of the bacteria found were antibiotic resistant, AMI said, it does note that they are not heat resistant. These bacteria are destroyed through normal cooking procedures, which may account for the small percentage of foodborne illnesses linked to these bacteria.

“As with any raw agricultural product, it is important to follow federal safe handling recommendations included on every meat and poultry package that urge consumers to wash hands and surfaces when handling raw meat and poultry and to separate raw from cooked foods to ensure that food is safe when served,” AMI noted.

According to a new white paper authored by Ellin Doyle, Ph.D., of the University of Wisconsin’s Food Research Institute, these bacteria are found in half of all human nasal passages – “a fact that points to the pervasiveness of this bacteria among people,” AMI said. Doyle’s white paper also noted that only two foodborne outbreaks of the antibiotic resistant strain of this bacteria have been identified and both were attributed to food handlers contaminating food – not to the food source itself. S. aureus is also carried by household pets and can be transmitted in health care settings.

A 2009 U.S. analysis by Louisiana State University researchers published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology concluded that the bacteria occurs at what they characterized as a “low rate,” which the researchers said was “likely due to human contamination.”

While the authors of the Pew-funded paper criticize U.S. production methods and suggest that they cause antibiotic resistant bacteria to develop, Doyle’s paper documents that similar incidence patterns can be observed in livestock in many countries with a variety of different production methods.

 

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