Sprout Redux 04

Sprout redux

04.dec.06
Commentary from the Food Safety Network
Douglas Powell

One year ago, Salmonella in mung bean sprouts sickened 650 Ontarians. Kingston, Ontario, was ground zero for the great Salmonella sprout outbreak of 2005. After 15 students at Queen’s University visited the emergency ward, puking and pooping, they tested positive for the same strain of Salmonella, a link was made to raw bean sprouts, and the city decided on Nov. 23, 2006 to warn the public. The next day, Dr. Sheela Basrur, Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health, advised the entire province not to eat raw or cooked bean sprouts, including those from grocery stores, home refrigerators or those served at restaurants.

Like undergarments for Britney Spears, Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton; sprouts were de facto banned.

As the number of confirmed sick people rose into the hundreds, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency on November 25, 2005, finally issued an advisory for mung bean sprouts manufactured by Toronto Sun Wah Trading Inc. — the largest sprout growth facility in the province.

There was a lot of press and a bit of outrage, but after bans, investigations, and promises of doing things differently, raw sprouts again became widely available, as soon as three weeks after the outbreak was identified. To borrow the words of a U.S. Food and Drug Administration official commenting on the return of fresh spinach to supermarket aisles this fall, the product was “just as safe as it was before the outbreak.”

Just as safe and just as dangerous, because nothing has changed. And if it has, the Canadian public would be the last to know.

On December 16, 2005, Kingston lifted its city-wide ban on sprouts after receiving clearance from CFIA, but the local medical officer of health, Dr. Ian Gemmill, was reluctant, stating, “I’m all for getting a definitive answer to this, but so far, our colleagues at CFIA have not provided us with a process that will assure that bean sprouts are not contaminated.”

They still haven’t.

A year later, such advisories have been magically lifted and sprouts are being placed ever so gingerly on gourmet, supposedly healthy sandwiches, in the complete absence of any evidence that raw sprouts are
any safer than they were before the outbreak.

The consumption of raw sprouts has been linked to over 30 outbreaks of foodborne illness throughout North America in the past 15 year affecting tens of thousands of people (a complete list of North American sprout outbreaks is available athttp://www.foodsafetynetwork.ca/en/article-details.php?a=2&c=6&sc=36&id=865).
The first consumer warning about sprouts was issued by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in 1997. By July 9, 1999, FDA had advised all Americans to be aware of the risks associated with eating raw sprouts and that the best way to control the risk was to simply not eat raw sprouts. FDA stated that it would monitor the situation and take any further actions required to protect consumers.

At the time, Canadian media depicted the U.S. response as panic at the disco, quoting Health Canada officials who said while some people were at risk; sprouts were generally a low-risk product.

The 650 sick Ontarians were undoubtedly comforted by such assurances.

 

Sprouts, by nature, present a special food safety challenge because the way they are grown — high moisture and high temperature — is also an ideal environment for bacterial growth. In addition to their cantankerous temperament, sprouts are impossible to wash, making CFIA’s standby warning to consumers to wash their produce even more pointless than usual.

Because of continued outbreaks, the sprout industry, regulatory agencies, and the academic community, at least in the U.S., pooled their efforts in the late 1990s to improve the safety of the product, including the implementation of good manufacturing practices, establishing guidelines for safe sprout production and chemical disinfection of seeds prior to sprouting.

That approach appears to have reduced the risk in the U.S. as the number of sprout outbreaks has declined. Not so in Canada, where CFIA routinely touts its best practices document.

But are these guidelines actually being followed? And even if they are, is anyone checking?

Thousands of sick people and a year after the world’s largest sprout-related outbreak, in a brazenly bizarre demonstration of Canadian politeness, no victims have stepped forward to complain (several have declined to go public at the last minute), no sprout growers have publicly defended their industry, no government-type has publicly stated why raw sprouts are now safe to eat, and no journalist has bothered to follow up.

So in the absence of official advisories in Canada, the choice is yours. Stick to what you know: don’t eat poop; and don’t eat products with poop on them. Sprouts in Canada are just as safe and just as dangerous as ever.

 

Douglas Powell is scientific director of the Food Safety Network at Kansas State University