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Think Outside the Bug
News broke on Sunday that 11 people, the youngest being a one year-old infant, had caught the E. coli bug from eating at Taco Bell restaurants in three different counties in New Jersey. Today, reports are revising that number to as many as 50 cases, spread over three states. The interesting thing about this outbreak is in the timing of the initial reports, the news stories, and the restaurant closures. Quoting from yesterday's New York Times article:
Compare this reaction, if you will, with the one in September, following a supposed outbreak of E. coli in raw milk from Organic Pastures Dairy in California. An immediate recall was ordered, even though no link between the E. coli infection and the milk had been proven nor had any tests even been run! When the milk finally was tested, no E. coli were found. Where's the immediate recall on Chalupas? Ultimately, this event brings us back to the fundamental problem of an industrialized food chain: when food sources become so centralized, contamination is so much harder to control. Bacteria from one sick cow, from one dirty farm, can infect tons and tons of food once it is all mixed together in a large processing plant. Furthermore, E. coli itself is a problem of industrialized food. Studies have shown that feeding cows grass for only the last 5 days of their lives dramatically reduces the presence of E. coli in the final product. How many hours on the toilet, and how many kidney failures will it take until we learn our lesson? (Props to The Ethicurean for inspiring this story.)
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