• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

U.S. agencies must talk to boost food safety: study

WASHINGTON
Thu May 22, 2008 3:55pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. federal agencies must do a better job of sharing information with each other as well as state, local and private organizations to combat deadly bacteria such as E. coli that threaten thousands of people each year, according to a study released on Thursday.

U.S.  |  Health

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has estimated that 76 million people in the United States get sick every year with some sort of foodborne illness and that 5,000 die.

The 148-page report said the current system is impaired because thousands of local health departments, university researchers, corporations and other institutions often collect data for their own use, with no mandate to share information.

To improve the food safety network, researchers said, incentives for government and private organizations to collaborate must replace the obstacles to sharing information.

"We're missing opportunities to prevent illness," said Michael Taylor, a professor of health policy at George Washington University, who co-authored the report.

"We are missing opportunities to make food safer. We don't have the best information about what the problems are and what the solutions can be," he said in a phone interview.

The report noted that individual government agencies have a sense of ownership that can deter data sharing while the food industry has competitive, liability and other reasons.

"The fact is that it's a system that's kind of evolved over the years so that you got all this fragmentation of responsibilities," said Taylor.

Food safety scares that have roiled consumers, Congress and federal health regulators over the past few years include spinach tainted with E. coli and peanut butter and pot pies with salmonella

The United States has nearly 3,000 local health departments and retail inspection agencies, millions of agricultural producers and a wide range of government and university researchers, the study said. The federal government alone has 15 agencies that handle food safety including the U.S. Agriculture Department and the Food and Drug Administration.

The study made several recommendations to improve the food safety system. Among the suggestions were:

-- A mandate from Congress or the president requiring all federal agencies to coordinate information collection and maximize data sharing among government and the private sector.

-- Create within the Department of Health and Human Services a council that has federal, state, and local officials to improve the collection and access to data. It would report annually to Congress about progress and obstacles that remain.

-- A panel of researchers and consumer groups to identify common problems and identify best practices such as changes in technology that can facilitate sharing data.

(Reporting by Christopher Doering; Editing by David Gregorio)



More from Reuters

 Paul Volcker arrives for a news conference where US President-elect Barack Obama (not pictured) presented his choices for his newly formed Economic Recovery Board in Chicago November 26, 2008. REUTERS/John Gress

Cheap cigars, politics and the Volcker Rule

He relishes cheap cigars, would rather take a bus than a taxi, and recently eloped. Meet Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve Chairman no one expected to be driving policy in the Obama administration.  Full Article 

    Trader John Boehm works in the 5-year US Treasury Bond Options Pit at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange September 16, 2008.  REUTERS/John Gress

    The big guns fire back

    The Wall Street behemoths that came close to collapse in the financial crisis are back and pushing aside the boutiques that made a killing during the turmoil.   Full Article 

    A banner painted with a skull and crossbones is seen during a demonstration in Damietta city, 200 kms northeast of Cairo, Egypt, June 17, 2008. REUTERS/Asmaa Waguih
    Reuters Breakingviews:

    Repo 105: Lehman's poison

    The autopsy of Lehman Brothers appears to have found many causes of death, including balance-sheet shenanigans, hubris, and a poison called Repo 105.  Commentary