Report: The 10 riskiest foods overseen by the FDA
"The most surprising things on the list are not so surprising when you look closely at the explanations and qualifications in the report," said Jean Halloran, Director of Food Policy Initiatives for Consumers Union.
The FDA is responsible for regulating produce, seafood, egg and dairy products -- but not meat or poultry -- that comprise nearly 80 percent of the food supply. The CSPI report noted that more than 1,500 separate, definable foodborne illness outbreaks were associated with the 10 foods on the list, causing nearly 50,000 reported illnesses. Since most foodborne illnesses go unreported, that number represents only a fraction of cases.Here are the top 10 offending foods and excerpts from sections of the report that detail why these foods made the list:
1) Leafy greens (363 outbreaks, 13,568 reported cases of illness)
Outbreaks from leafy greens occur anywhere these popular food items are consumed. Contamination may be present from production and processing, or may occur through improper handling and preparation, such as inadequate handwashing and cross-contamination of cutting boards and other equipment. A major outbreak occurred in bagged spinach in 2006. In restaurants, any of these problems in only a single food item can affect multiple patrons.
2) Eggs (352 outbreaks, 11,163 reported cases of illness)
Eggs can contain salmonella. Half of all egg outbreaks occurred from restaurants and other food establishments. While proper egg handling and cooking should destroy most pathogens, serving eggs raw or “runny,” or leaving egg dishes at improper holding temperatures (such as on a breakfast buffet) can allow the bacteria to multiply.
3) Tuna ( 268 outbreaks, 2341 reported cases of illness)
Fresh fish decay quickly after being caught and, if stored above 60 degrees F, begin to release natural toxins that are dangerous for humans. Adequate refrigeration and handling can slow this spoilage, but the toxin cannot be destroyed by cooking, freezing, smoking, curing, or canning.
4) Oysters (132 outbreaks, 3409 reported cases of illness)
Illnesses from oysters occur primarily from two sources: Norovirus and Vibrio. Although Norovirus in other foods is usually associated with improper handling during harvest or preparation, oysters can actually be harvested from waters contaminated with Norovirus. When served raw or undercooked, those oysters can cause gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the stomach and small or large intestines.
5) Potatoes (108 outbreaks, 3659 reported cases of illness)
Potatoes are grown in the soil, but they are always cooked before consuming. Outbreaks are linked to dishes, like potato salad, that can contain many ingredients and also a broad range of pathogens. More than 40 percent of potato outbreaks were linked to foods prepared in restaurants and food establishments (including grocery stores and delis).
6) Cheese (83 outbreaks, 2761 reported cases of illness)
Cheese can become contaminated with pathogens during the initial phases of production (curdling, molding, and salting), or later during processing. This summer California health officials warned consumers about eating Latin American-style cheeses such as queso fresco made with unpasteurized milk that may contain bacteria.
7) Ice cream (74 outbreaks, 2594 reported cases of illness)
Almost half of all ice-cream outbreaks contained in CSPI’s database occurred in private homes. This is most likely due to the use of undercooked eggs in homemade ice cream.
8) Tomatoes (31 outbreaks, 3292 reported cases of illness)
Salmonella can enter tomato plants through roots or flowers and can enter the tomato fruit through small cracks in the skin, the stem scar, or the plant itself. Once inside, destruction of salmonella without cooking the tomato is very difficult. Norovirus was the second most common hazard. Restaurants were responsible for 70 percent of all illnesses associated with tomatoes.
9) Sprouts (31 outbreaks, 2022 reported cases of illness)
The most likely source of sprout contamination is the seeds that are used to grow the sprouts. Seeds may become contaminated in the field or during storage, and the warm and humid conditions required to grow sprouts are ideal for the rapid growth of bacteria. Improper handling and poor hygiene in sprout production have also caused some sprout-related outbreaks.
10) Berries (25 outbreaks, 3397 reported cases of illness)
Most of the berry-related illnesses were caused by Cyclospora. The resulting infection is a parasitic illness of the intestines, which can cause severe diarrhea, dehydration, and stomach cramps. Importantly, the illness does not resolve itself without antibiotics, thus requiring a trip to the doctor.
Our take: This Top 10 list underscores the need for food safety reform. The House passed the Food Safety Enhancement Act in July. We'd like to see the Senate follow its lead and take stronger measures to protect the nation's food supply.

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Posted by: eli | Oct 11, 2009 10:05:25 PM
I think that Eggs and Oysters aren't really regulated by FDA. I believe USDA oversees meat and eggs. Oysters are regulated by NOAA. I don't think this list is an accurate way to represent risk from food since outbreaks miss single cases of foodborne illness which greatly outweight outbreak cases.
Posted by: Safety Blogger | Oct 9, 2009 12:27:41 PM
The CSPI report takes its numbers from total reported outbreaks--which is very different from total incidence of foodborne illness. To actually make it into the CDC database of reported outbreaks takes quite a lot. Once a person gets sick, that person must be sick enough to actually go to a doctor. Then the doctor must take a stool sample and send it to a lab for analysis to identify a pathogen. The lab must find it interesting enough to send to the state department of health, who must then forward it to the Center for Disease Control. The CDC must then see this as part of a pattern of similar outbreaks and trace it back to a particular food.
Obviously only a tiny portion of all cases of food poisoning make it into this CDC database of illnesses involved in outbreaks. In fact, the CDC has estimated that 76 million Americans (one in four) experience a foodborne illness every year, most unreported, and about 325,000 are hospitalized. They estimate that these cases result in 5,000 deaths annually. About half of the cases are among very young children. This is a problem we can and should solve.
Posted by: Daniel | Oct 8, 2009 6:13:40 PM
I have a lot of respect for Consumer Reports and all you've done over the years to empower the consumer, but on this post you whiffed.
There's a major problem with this report that nobody seems to be noticing: the CSPI buries in their report that these 48,000 reported illnesses occurred over a 17 year period, from 1990 to 2006. That works out to only 2800 cases per year, for a US population of 300 million. Break out your calculator and you'll see that this is no health crisis--it's not even a rounding error. Worse, these numbers are just illnesses! The fatality rate is infinitessimal.
I have sympathy for people who have suffered from food-borne sickness, but it hurts the public to put out a misleading report like this. All it does is scare people away from otherwise perfectly healthy foods--and it makes people worry about the wrong things.
We should be spending our resources and our energies on real health crises like cardovascular deaths, auto fatalities or other illnesses, not some manufactured health scare by a lobbying group.
Daniel
The Casual Kitchen Blog
Posted by: hsr0601 | Oct 8, 2009 2:59:37 AM
I think the most dangerous food is meat as it destroys humanity and lead to wars and destroys all ultimately.
Obesity & Magic Pill :
I personally recognize that wheat is a far better diet than meat on the ground it normally exits body with ease and rapidity, and we are well aware that our heath depends upon smooth metabolism and blood stream associated with the immune system and how important our daily workout is, as well.
I still think the critical conditions mostly come from breach of our immune system, and the food that stays long in the body is more likely to become a source where germs, bacterias, viruses and the like multiply.
Sounds outlandish, but wheat might be a principal "clean and healthy" food that has led western society to the most decent culture of all.