How to Make Food Safer
IS EATING dangerous? Some statistics might lead you to conclude that it is. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), about 130 million people in the WHO European Region are affected by foodborne disease each year. In the United Kingdom alone, over 100,000 cases of food poisoningcausing about 200 deathswere reported in 1998. It is estimated that in the United States, some 76 million illnesses result from foodborne disease each year and that of those cases, 325,000 involve hospitalization and 5,000 end in death.
Globally, careful estimates are harder to come by. However, WHO reports that in 1998, approximately 2.2 million people died from diarrheic diseases1.8 million of them being children. The report notes: "A great proportion of these cases can be attributed to contamination of food and drinking water."
Those figures may sound staggering. But should statistics cause you to panic about the safety of your own food? Probably not. Consider another example. In Australia, there are some 4.2 million cases of foodborne illness every yearor about 11,500 every day! Now that may sound like a lot. But look at it from a different perspective. Australians eat about 20 billion meals a year; of those meals less than one fiftieth of one percent lead to illness. In other words, the risk involved in each meal is really very small.
Nonetheless, the risk is real and sobering. What causes food to bring on illnesses, and what can be done to reduce the risk?
Causes of Foodborne Illness

A remarkable number of diseases can be passed along in foodmore than 200 of them, says the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases. But the culprits causing all those diseases are not so numerous. According to Dr. Iain Swadling, food information officer for the International Food Information Service, about 90 percent of all cases of foodborne disease are caused by "probably less than two dozen" species of microorganisms. How do the various disease-causing agentsthe viruses, bacteria, parasites, toxins, and so forthfind their way into food?
Dr. Swadling lists five of the most common ways that food is contaminated: "Using contaminated raw foodstuffs; infected/ill people preparing meals; inadequate storage combined with preparation of food several hours before consumption; cross-contamination during food preparation; insufficient cooking or reheating of food." Grim though that list may appear to be, it conveys a potent bit of good news. Most instances of foodborne illness are readily preventable. To see what you can do to ensure the safety of the food you consume, note the box "Steps You Can Take".
Making Balanced Choices

In view of the various risks and concerns about food, some people today decide to take the time to buy, prepare, and eat more fresh food. If that option appeals to you, seek out stores or markets in your area that sell fresh, untreated commodities. One consumer guide explains: "Many consumers seek contact with the producerseither at weekly markets [where fresh produce is sold] or where the food is producedso as to buy the items when they are particularly fresh and to get a look at the production of the food and its origin." This practice may be helpful when buying meat products.
In a similar vein, it may be best to purchase local foodstuffs in season, since they may be the healthiest. Realize, however, that if you adhere to such a standard, you will forfeit having a global selection of fruit and vegetables year-round.
Should you switch to organic food? That is a personal decision. Organic food has many enthusiasts, some no doubt motivated by distrust of new technologies used in the food industry. But not everyone agrees that organic farming offers safer food.
Whatever your preferences in food, carefully examine what you buy. "Where food is concerned," laments one expert quoted in the weekly newspaper Die Zeit, "the consumer looks only at the price." Being price conscious is laudable, but inspect the list of ingredients as well. It is estimated that nearly half the people buying food in Western lands do not take the time to read the nutritional information printed on labels. Granted, in some lands labeling is not comprehensive. But if you want safe food, then do what you can to examine the ingredients.
Whatever decisions you make regarding the foods you eat, you will probably need to be willing to bend at times, adapting to the realities of the land in which you live. For many people in this day and age, it is simply impossibletoo expensive, too time-consuming, too problematicto make sure that they eat only foods that are verifiably safe in every respect.
Does that strike you as a rather grim assessment of today's world? It is simply realistic. The good news, however, is that things will soon change for the better.
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