Organic Consumers Association    News | Campaigns | GE Food | Organics | Food Locator | Events | Irradiation | Globalization | Cloning | rBGH
Mad Cow | Toxic Food | Search | Newsletter | Donate | Volunteer | About | Home | recommend site | email this page


Deadly e-Coli Bacteria is in Half of all US Cattle--
Government Will Announce Food Irradiation Rules

Wednesday November 10 1:25 PM ET

Deadly E. Coli Bug May Affect Half of U.S. Cattle

By Julie Vorman

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A deadly strain of E. coli bacteria is far more
common in U.S. cattle than previously thought, and may be found in half the animals
that are made into ground beef, steaks and other cuts, a senior U.S. Agriculture
Department official told Reuters on Wednesday.

The surprisingly high rate of E. coli 0157:H7, detected by more sensitive
testing techniques used since September, has prompted the USDA to take the unusual
step of re-evaluating how it regulates the foodborne disease.

The bacteria can cause kidney failure and death among children or the
elderly who eat contaminated ground beef.

But among cattle, E. coli 0157:H7 lives harmlessly in the digestive tract.
The bug migrates when animals are slaughtered and skinned, moving from internal
organs and hides to flesh.

Tom Billy, administrator of the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service,
said in an interview that agency scientists were still analyzing data but decided to
alert the industry
about the unexpected preliminary results.

USDA regulations to protect consumers from E. coli 0157:H7 contamination
were based
on 1994 data showing the bug occurred in one of every 2,000 or so
carcasses at the slaughter plant.

``The prevalence could be much more common and as high as one in every two
carcasses,'' Billy said. ``If that's true, it changes significantly the
options available to us to achieve the zero tolerance.''

USDA regulations allow ``zero tolerance'' of E. coli 0157:H7. If tests
detect the
pathogen in raw ground beef, that batch is considered adulterated and is
usually
destroyed. Companies can process the meat at high temperatures to kill the
bacteria, then use it in cooked foods such as canned chili.

``We are not changing the zero tolerance policy. That will remain in
effect. That will not change,'' he said.

The USDA is drafting some options that may include changes in testing
procedures, and
will publish them next month. A public hearing will be held in
mid-January, Billy said.

The new data was criticized as misleading by cattlemen.

``There is no evidence the prevalence of this organism has changed at all
since we began
studying it in the early 1990s,'' said Gary Weber of the National
Cattlemens Beef
Association.

The USDA data reflects only whether cattle have been exposed to the bug at
some point
in their lives -- not that they are carrying it at the time of slaughter,
Weber said. Actual
infection rates are less than one-half percent of cows, based on testing
by meat grinders and processors, he said.

The new data also raises the issue of whether farmers and ranchers need to
do more to prevent E. coli in their herds.

The bacteria is found more often on the hides of feedlot cattle, the USDA
said. Feedlot
cattle are typically fattened in a confined area just before going to
slaughter.

The animals spread E. coli 0157:H7 by defecating and drooling in shared
water troughs.

Consumer groups say on-farm prevention is essential.

``We'd like to see development of some kind of vaccine or competitive
exclusion product
for cattle that will eliminate this strain of bacteria from the gut of the
animals,'' said
Caroline Smith DeWaal, a food safety expert with the Center for Science in
the Public Interest.

The U.S. meat industry is also examining the issue.

The American Meat Institute, an industry trade group, has funded research
to measure
how much E. coli is left on an animal hide after slaughter. The
researchers are also trying
to determine whether various chemical dips, steam vacuuming or other
treatments of
hides are best to kill the bacteria.

With E. coli more common in raw meat, processors are likely to embrace
irradiation
technology that can kill the bacteria.

``Several companies are looking very hard at irradiation right now,'' said
Mike Doyle, a
University of Georgia researcher. ``The economics are an important factor.
How much
are we willing to pay for ground beef, and how much are we willing to
throw out as adulterated?''

The USDA's long-delayed regulations for irradiation use in plants will be
issued by the end of December, Billy said.

The USDA monitors E. coli 0157:H7 in ground beef by taking 8,000 samples
annually at slaughter plants and grocery stores.

A recent outbreak of the bug at a New York fair killed an elderly man and
a three-year-old
girl, and sickened more than 600 others. Investigators have theorized a
water well may
have been contaminated by nearby dairy cow barns.

Nationwide, an estimated 52 Americans die annually from E. coli 0157:H7
and 60,000 others fall ill from the bug.


News | GE Food | Organics | Food Locator | Events | Irradiation | Globalization | Cloning | rBGH
Mad Cow | Toxic Food | About Us | Newsletter | Donate | Join Us | Keyword Search | Home - tell a friend
Campaigns : Starbucks : Safeguard our Students : Monsanto Watch
Please support our work, send a tax-deductible donation to OCA

to BioDemocracy News
(published every 6 weeks) previous issues

Organic Consumers Association
6101 Cliff Estate Rd., Little Marais, MN 55614
Activist or Media Inquiries: (218) 226-4164,  Fax: (218) 226-4157