Safe Food_ Bacteria, Biotechnology, and Bioterrorism - Marion Nestle [213]
21. Nestle M. The spinach fallout: Restoring trust in California produce [perspective]. San Jose Mercury News, October 22, 2006.
22. Chadwell J. Natural Selection Foods learns from experience. ThePacker.com, September 7, 2007. California Department of Food and Agriculture. Proposed California leafy green products handler marketing agreement, January 24, 2007. Online: www.caff.org/policy/documents/lgph_agreement.pdf. FDA. Guide to minimize microbial food safety hazards for fresh fruits and vegetables, October 26, 1998. FDA. Produce safety: 2004 action plan to minimize foodborne illness associated with fresh produce consumption, October 2004. FDA. Letter to California firms that grow, pack, process, or ship fresh and fresh-cut lettuce, November 4, 2005. FDA. Lettuce safety initiative, August 23, 2006. Online: www.fda.gov/Food. FDA. FDA statement on foodborne E. coli O157:H7 outbreak in spinach, September 19, 2006. Online: www.fda.gov.
23. Marler B. Wisconsin woman severely sickened by E. coli in spinach forced to sue, September 3, 2009. Online: www.marlerblog.com.
24. FDA. Guidance to industry: Guide to minimize microbial food safety hazards of leafy greens; draft guidance, July 2009. Online: www.fda.gov/Food.
25. Associated Press. E. coli outbreak sickens 11 in N.J., December 3, 2007. Online: www.sfgate.com. FDA. FDA investigating E. coli O157:H7 infections associated with Taco Bell restaurants in Northeast, December 6, 2006. Online: www.fda.gov. Belson K, Smothers R. Reports of illness spread as search for E. coli source narrows. NYT, December 8, 2006:B1.
26. Adamy J, Vranica S. Taco Bell faces new questions about E. coli. WSJ, December 13, 2006:B1. Creed G. Taco Bell food is safe. NYT, December 12, 2006:A23. A second advertisement appeared on December 18 announcing the end of the CDC’s investigation. The quotation is from DePalma A, Martin A. New Jersey distribution site is scrutinized as more E. coli cases are reported. NYT, December 8, 2006:B1.
27. CDC. Multistate outbreak of E. coli O157 infections linked to Taco Bell, November–December 2006. Online: www.cdc.gov/ecoli/2006/december/.
28. Schlosser E. Has politics contaminated the food supply? NYT, December 11, 2006. Sickened by fresh produce. NYT, December 9, 2006 (editorial). Burros M. E. coli fears inspire a call for oversight. NYT, December 9, 2006:B1.
29. FDA. Melamine pet food recall of 2007. Online: www.fda.gov/AnimalVeterinary/SafetyHealth/RecallsWithdrawals/ucm129575.htm.
30. Xin H, Stone R. Chinese probe unmasks high-tech adulteration with melamine. Science 2008;322:1310–1311. Ingelfinger JR. Melamine and the global implications of food contamination. NEJM 2008;359:2745–2748. Melamine and food safety in China. Lancet 2009;373:353. Kuehn BM. Melamine scandals highlight hazards of increasingly globalized food chain. JAMA 2009;301:473–475. China executes 2 for role in tainted milk scandal. NYT, November 24, 2009. Online: www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/11/24/world/AP-AS-China-TaintedMilk.html. The FDA’s melamine-in-China page is at www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/08/briefing/2008-4386b3.pdf. Melamine scandals continued into 2010.
31. Inspector General. Review of the Food and Drug Administration’s monitoring of pet food recalls, August 12, 2009. Online: http://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region1/10701503.pdf.
32. The quotations are from Moss M. E. coli path shows flaws in beef inspection. NYT, October 4, 2009. Stephanie Smith’s medical problems and lawsuit are documented online at www.marlerblog.com. USDA recalls are archived online at http://origin-www.fsis.usda.gov/Fsis_Recalls/Recall_Case_Archive/index.asp.
33. USDA/FSIS. Handling the largest meat recall in U.S. history, February 22, 2008. Online: www.fsis.usda.gov. Humane Society of the United States. HSUS investigates slaughterhouse. Online: http://video.hsus.org/.
34. USDA/FSIS. California firm recalls beef products derived from non-ambulatory cattle without