FDA: Avoid jalapenos from Mexico, not US

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WASHINGTON — Only jalapeno peppers grown in Mexico are implicated in the nationwide salmonella outbreak, the government announced Friday in clearing the U.S. crop.

The Food and Drug Administration urged consumers to avoid raw Mexican jalapenos and the serrano peppers often confused with them, or dishes made with them such as fresh salsa.

But the big question is how those who love hot peppers would know where the chiles came from, especially in restaurant food.

"You're going to have to ask the person you're buying it from," said Dr. David Acheson, the FDA's food safety chief, who is advising restaurants and grocery stores to know their suppliers and pass that information to customers.

The big break in an outbreak that now has sickened nearly 1,300 people came on Monday, when FDA announced it had found the same strain of salmonella responsible for the outbreak on a single Mexican-grown jalapeno in a south Texas produce warehouse.

Tomatoes had been the prime suspect for weeks. And while those now on the market are considered safe to eat, health officials still haven't exonerated them from causing illnesses when the outbreak began in April.

The pepper discovery threatened to paralyze that industry, too. Chile production is a $500 million crop in New Mexico alone, which produces most of the U.S. crop, state agriculture commissioners wrote the FDA on Thursday.

Friday's move clearing U.S. peppers came because clusters of illnesses around the country all seem to be tracing back to Mexican jalapenos, though not all sold through the McAllen, Texas, produce warehouse, Acheson said.

"Domestically grown products are not tracing back at all to the outbreak," he said in an interview with The Associated Press. "On Monday, we didn't know exactly where they all were coming from. Today we're certain these are coming from Mexico."

FDA inspectors are on the farm that grew the only tainted pepper discovered so far, trying to determine where else it sent a harvest that began in April, Acheson said. The farm is large, but the question now is whether it harvested enough to be responsible for such a geographically large outbreak.

Mexican officials blasted the announcement as premature, saying the fact that no additional salmonella was found in the Texas warehouse doesn't eliminate that site as a suspect.

"Both U.S. and Mexican tomato producers are still dealing with the impact of premature public information given by the FDA in the past, and we expect the FDA to present solid scientific evidence to back today's announcement as soon as possible," said Ricardo Alday, spokesman for the Mexican embassy in Washington.

The news is a relief for U.S. pepper growers.

"It's good news, late in the process. It's an announcement they should have made some days ago," said John McClung of the Texas Produce Association.

He called the warning still too broad, because many peppers from Mexico are grown on farms in regions not implicated.

At the same time, investigators from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are retracing the probe's early steps to see if jalapenos were missed early on — or if tomatoes did indeed play a role. Initial reports from the first ill in New Mexico and Texas provided a strong link to tomatoes, but salsa was eaten, too, with less attention paid to its other ingredients.

"We're still very interested in looking at the role tomatoes played in this outbreak given the strong epidemiological association," said CDC's Dr. Ian Williams. That is "very much part of the active investigation at the moment."

To date, the CDC has confirmed 1,294 people sickened from the outbreak. It doesn't appear to be over yet, with people falling ill as late as July 10.

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{"commentId":2281023,"authorDomain":"evey"}

The FDA carries guns and of course they want you to think everyone else is hurting you but not the U.S. government or bush (their boss) we wouldn't send you to die for no reason. So to cover up their skid marks they need you to think the threat is else ware. Just another tactic to try to build a wall between Mexico and the U.S. they still come from Canada or Florida come on this is not news.

{"commentId":2281023,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"evey"}
    Reply#1 - Fri Jul 25, 2008 4:41 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2281213,"authorDomain":"writingathena"}

    "The FDA carries guns" is a really weird comment. The FDA is not a law-enforcement agency. It's possible that some of their field agents might carry guns. I think what they mostly carry is sample collection vials and petri dishes.

    I'm wondering why this outbreak became the exclusive jurisdiction of the FDA. Seems like the U.S. Department of Agriculture might have handled this with some skill. Maybe they are required to turn the issue over once the contaminants enter the food supply.

    {"commentId":2281213,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"writingathena"}
    • 2 votes
    #1.1 - Fri Jul 25, 2008 4:59 PM EDT
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    {"commentId":2281121,"authorDomain":"writingathena"}

    The FDA probably put more than one Florida tomato grower out of business forever with their abysmal bungling of this case. How long did it take the detectives to figure out that there are other ingredients in fresh salsa besides tomatoes. Sheesh.

    {"commentId":2281121,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"writingathena"}
    • 1 vote
    Reply#2 - Fri Jul 25, 2008 4:50 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2281542,"authorDomain":"kbd"}

    If the FDA would have passed the regulation requiring that food labels state the country of origin for ingredients, perhaps the avoiding Mexican peppers would be a little easier. Instead they bowed down to food processors.

    {"commentId":2281542,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"kbd"}
    • 3 votes
    Reply#3 - Fri Jul 25, 2008 5:33 PM EDT
    {"commentId":2282712,"authorDomain":"writingathena"}

    That's an impracticable labeling solution with fresh produce, because of the way it is harvested, wholesaled, packed and shipped. If it comes to a packer stateside in bulk, it will be mixed in with other stuff from all over. If you pack it for retail at its point of origin, that's a different story. But the vast majority of fresh produce is shipped in bulk from several different farms, gets brought to packing sheds or processing facilities, gets dumped into baths and bins and conveyor belts, is sorted, and repacked for wholesale or retail. There is no way to individually label each jalapeno.

    {"commentId":2282712,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"writingathena"}
      #3.1 - Fri Jul 25, 2008 8:12 PM EDT
      {"commentId":2286054,"authorDomain":"kbd"}

      Then you are saying the FDA's advice to avoid Mexican jalapenos and not American ones is not possible. So yet another failure of the fda and govt under the current regime.

      {"commentId":2286054,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"kbd"}
      • 2 votes
      #3.2 - Sat Jul 26, 2008 11:48 AM EDT
      {"commentId":2287021,"authorDomain":"writingathena"}

      No, I said it's not practicable to label every single pepper. But it is possible for the produce industry to keep Mexican jalapenos out of the supply chain.

      After this advice from the FDA, packers who receive and then repack and ship fresh produce can avoid purchasing bulk shipments from Mexico. In some packing houses, the produce is kept separate depending on country of origin; in others (for example, ones that cater mostly to food processors) it may not be.

      For your average grocery store consumer, the ability to follow the advice will depend on what wholesaler the store buys from. I shop at a grocery store where all the produce is labeled by country of origin, and even state of origin for produce within the U.S.

      Sadly, your average grocery store consumer has no understanding whatsoever of where his food comes from or how it is grown. Just because it made it to the grocery store shelves doesn't mean it shouldn't be washed and handled with care.

      {"commentId":2287021,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"writingathena"}
      • 1 vote
      #3.3 - Sat Jul 26, 2008 2:20 PM EDT
      Reply
      {"commentId":2282006,"authorDomain":"steve-sue"}
      crap-O-laDeleted
      {"commentId":2285530,"authorDomain":"wahela1"}

      Even Lou Dobbs (who I don't even really watch much at all) said sarcastically, "They found Salmonella on ONE jalapeno pepper. Just one. How did they do that?" I agree. Its kind of like, how do you find it on one pepper out of billions of peppers coming from that area? And I am sure that there are all kinds of bacteria on peppers coming from anywhere. I wash fresh fruits and veggies before I eat them. I am sure there is salmonella on a lot of stuff we don't know about. I am a nurse, and hearing on TV that washing these foods does not get rid of salmonella, that's a crock. Because it doesn't matter where the peppers come from, there is bacteria all over this world, the bacteria isn't only in Mexico. I'm wondering why they are coming up with this idea about peppers from Mexico. I bet there are bacterias in my garden (I used composted manure, which smelled a whole lot like regular manure) that would rival Mexico's bacteria. The world is full of bacteria. Somebody is not washing things before cutting them up.

      {"commentId":2285530,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"wahela1"}
      • 1 vote
      Reply#5 - Sat Jul 26, 2008 10:26 AM EDT
      {"commentId":2287039,"authorDomain":"writingathena"}

      I think they found the identical genetic strain of this bacterium, which is apparently especially virulent. My guess is it comes from one farm in Mexico where there was either a sewage leak in the irrigation water, or there is the inappropriate use of human waste to fertilize fields. (It's against the law here, and may be against the law there, but the regulatory arm of the FDA doesn't quite reach that far.)

      You're absolutely right about washing produce--it works.

      {"commentId":2287039,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"writingathena"}
      • 1 vote
      #5.1 - Sat Jul 26, 2008 2:23 PM EDT
      Reply
      {"commentId":2289100,"authorDomain":"wahela1"}

      They said on the news when they were looking at tomatoes, that the salmonella had gotten inside the tomato and washing would not do any good. Just like with any veggie, any bacteria is going to be on the outside, or get in through a break in the skin, just like with human skin. So I thought it was kind of peculiar that they were saying the bacteria was on the inside. And they said washing wouldn't do any good.

      Even with a sewer break, its quite unusual that one would be able to find, out of billions of jalapenos, the one pepper that tells them exactly where it was coming from. I would be willing to bet they hadn't checked the herbs used in the salsa.

      {"commentId":2289100,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"wahela1"}
        Reply#6 - Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:33 PM EDT
        {"commentId":2301059,"authorDomain":"mynewsspot"}

        The FDA is majorly incompetent these days. It is run by a Republican Yahoo, Von E., who doesn't give a darn about saving lives. He is all about making money for the Big Pharms.

        {"commentId":2301059,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"mynewsspot"}
          Reply#7 - Mon Jul 28, 2008 1:06 PM EDT
          {"commentId":2301137,"authorDomain":"mynewsspot"}

          Here is the answer to the FDA problem:
          Make an agency just solely for the safty of foods, including herbs and food supplements. And another agency solely for the huge support of Big Pharms (sarcasm intended), for the supposed safety of our pharmacuetical industry.

          Most certainly the alternative medicine/food supplement industry and the pharmaceutical industries should be very strongly separated, with no influence over each other.

          {"commentId":2301137,"threadId":"319766","contentId":"1695641","authorDomain":"mynewsspot"}
            Reply#8 - Mon Jul 28, 2008 1:13 PM EDT
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