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Food Safety Alerts

Last post 05-04-2008, 9:24 AM by zymry. 20 replies.
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  •  08-18-2007, 8:06 PM

    Food Safety Alerts

    Canadian Crime News

         

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    Health Canada issues warning on baby carrots

     
    CBC NEWS
    2007 08 18

    People in Canada are being warned not to eat a brand of baby carrots from Mexico because the product may be contaminated with shigella bacteria.

    The item, Los Angeles Salad Company Genuine Sweet Baby Carrots, was sold in 672-gram plastic bags with sell-by dates up to and including Aug. 13 of this year, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) says.

    The product was sold in Costco stores in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and Newfoundland, the agency says.

    There have been four reported illnesses associated with the consumption of the carrots, CFIA says on its website.

    Food contaminated with shigella may not look or smell spoiled. Shigella infection can cause diarrhea, fever, nausea and vomiting.

    The illness usually lasts from four to 14 days. In some people, especially the very young, and very old, and in people with compromised immune systems, the diarrhea can be more severe.

    Infection can occur after eating and drinking food and water that is contaminated with shigella and can be passed from person to person.

    Costco Wholesale is voluntarily recalling the affected product from the marketplace.

     
     
     

    We gratefully acknowledge the hard work and efforts by the original reporters and news mediums, to bring these reports to our attention. Our aim is to bring these stories/reports as much exposure as possible and credit those who provided them.

     

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  •  08-18-2007, 8:09 PM

    Re: Food Safety Alerts

    why buy foreign carrots we have the best right here in Canada

    stupidity governs the world
  •  08-18-2007, 8:20 PM

    Re: Food Safety Alerts

    notme wrote:
    why buy foreign carrots we have the best right here in Canada

    Heck.. right here  in the greater Moncton area...

    Support our own first..

    Visit the Farmers Markets, Moncton and in Dieppe


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  •  08-20-2007, 6:02 PM

    Majority fear imported food unsafe, poll finds



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    Majority fear imported food unsafe, poll finds

     

    Globe and Mail

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070820.wcma20/BNStory/specialScienceandHealth/home

    VANCOUVER — An overwhelming majority of Canadians are worried about the safety of imported foods – fruits and vegetables in particular – because of lax environmental standards in other countries, according to a new poll.

    The survey, commissioned by the Canadian Medical Association, found that 87 per cent of respondents were very or somewhat concerned about the potential impact on their health because the inspection and monitoring of foods may not be adequate abroad.

    That concern is quite justified, a leading expert told the CMA annual meeting Sunday in Vancouver.

    “It's underappreciated by the public how important food is as a source of exposure to contaminants,” said Ray Copes, director of environmental health at the B.C. Centre for Disease Control. He said the level of surveillance of food, and imported food in particular, is clearly inadequate.

    But food is not the public's only environmental worry. Eighty-two per cent of those surveyed said they were concerned about the effect of climate change on their well-being and, specifically, how rising global temperatures might hasten the spread of disease.

    In the same poll, 75 per cent of respondents said they were troubled by the use of herbicides and pesticides. A near-identical number, 74 per cent, expressed worry about the effects of soil contamination on local fruits and vegetables.

    “The effect of the environment on health is not an abstract concept for Canadians,” said Colin McMillan, president of the CMA.

    He said the high level of concern in the general public means physicians need to find “more ways to educate and help Canadians offset and manage environmental health effects.”

    Doctors should also lead by example, Dr. McMillan said. At its conference, the CMA is inviting doctors to measure their ecological footprints and offering tips on “greening” their practices.

    The CMA represents the country's 65,000 physicians. The membership consists of general practitioners, specialists, interns, residents, medical students, and retirees.

    The CMA releases a National Report Card on Health Care annually.

    This year, the focus is on the link between environment and health, the intersection of the two top-of-mind political issues.

    More than one in four people surveyed said they or a family member had sought medical treatment for an environmentally related health condition such as cancer, asthma, allergies or other respiratory illnesses.

    “The degradation of the environment is resulting in increasing emergency room visits, hospitalization and even premature deaths,” Dr. McMillan said.

    A large majority of Canadians, 83 per cent, said they have changed their lifestyle to lessen their impact on the environment.

    These changes include recycling, driving less, conserving energy, composting and using public transit.

    Further, two-thirds of those polled said they had taken action to protect their own health from environmentally related risks. The actions cited included using sunscreen, recycling, buying organic foods and drinking filtered water.

    Due to the focus on climate change, the environment now ranks alongside – both were cited by 29 per cent of those surveyed – as the issue most deserving of attention from Canada's leaders.

    The new poll, conducted by Ipsos Reid, surveyed 1,001 Canadian adults between June 19 and 29. It is considered accurate within 3.2 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

    In addition to the environmental questions, for the seventh year running the CMA asked the public about their perceptions of the health system.

    Over all, the responses were more pessimistic than in recent years.

    In 2007, about three in five Canadians, 62 per cent, gave the system an A or B grade for overall quality of health-care services. That is down from 67 per cent a year earlier.

    Governments who are ultimately responsible for the health system scored low marks. Only 31 per cent of respondents assigned an A or B grade to the federal government, and provincial governments fared only slightly better with 35 per cent.

    More than one in five voters, 22 per cent, gave governments an F, a failing grade, for their administration of the health-care system, up from 16 per cent last year.

    Despite all the money and political energy invested in reducing wait times, the public seems unimpressed.

    In fact, the grades assigned on access to services have steadily declined over the past four years. Only 29 per cent of those polled gave an A mark in assessing access to family doctors in the community, while access to emergency room services ranked a lowly 18 per cent, and access to specialists fared even worse at 14 per cent.

    Overall, the public was most critical of the paltry level of access to mental health services, with a lowly nine per cent assigning an A grade.

    We gratefully acknowledge the hard work and efforts by the original reporters and news mediums, to bring these reports to our attention. Our aim is to bring these stories/reports as much exposure as possible and credit those who provided them.

     

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  •  09-16-2007, 4:47 PM

    black widow spiders in grapes


     

         

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     Check grapes for 8-legged visitors
    FOOD SAFETY

    2007 09 16

    ROBYN YOUNG
    The Daily News, Halifax

    http://www.hfxnews.ca/index.cfm?sid=62833&sc=89

    Finding black widow spiders in imported table grapes is not all that uncommon, according the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

    Over the summer, there were two reported incidents in Ontario. The most recent case was Friday in Sackville, when Marsha Weaver and her 3 1/2-year-old son Gavin sat down to enjoy a bowl of red grapes, only to find one of the venomous creepy crawlies hidden in the bunch.

    According to the agency website, the black widow spider is "the most common living thing that might be injurious to human health and found in fresh produce."

    Black widows have shiny round bodies, are brown or black in colour and have two red or yellow triangles in on their abdomen.

    The bite from a female black widow can cause illness and, in rare cases, death in children, seniors and people with weak immune systems.

    It's difficult for food inspectors to see the spiders when they do a visual inspection of produce crossing the border, said an agency representative who did not want her name used.

    "I think what happens is that they get into the grape vines and you can't see them until you take the grapes apart," she said.

    The agency website recommends consumers report any findings of these poisonous arachnids, and that's exactly what Weaver did on Friday with her eight-legged friend.

    It now lives at the Nova Scotia Museum of Natural History.

    Amy Bartlett, who works at the museum, said the finding was recorded and will go to the museum's lab for inspection.

    "It's happened before," she said.

    "So it's recorded and then we keep the spider in our collections."                                                        

    The black widow spider found in Sackville home on Friday has found a new home at the Museum of Natural History.
    The black widow spider found in Sackville home on Friday has found a new home at the Museum of Natural History.

     

     

     

    ==================================

    We gratefully acknowledge the hard work and efforts by the original reporters and news mediums, to bring these reports to our attention. Our aim is to bring these stories/reports as much exposure as possible and credit those who provided them.

     

     

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  •  03-12-2008, 2:24 PM

    President's Choice Toddler pear juices




          

     
                         
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    President's Choice Toddler pear juices may contain arsenic,   
     
    2008 03 12
                                                     

    The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) is warning the public not to consume certain pear juices for toddlers as they may be contaminated with arsenic.
     
    The CFIA said in a news release that there have been no reported illnesses associated with the consumption of the products.
     
    The two products listed in the warning are the one-litre President's Choice Organics Pear Juice from Concentrate for Toddlers and the 128-millilitre Beech Nut Pear Juice from concentrate with Vitamin C added.
     

     


    The products have been distributed across the country, the agency said.
     
     
     

    ====================================
     

    This Post contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific,  social and criminal justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes  'Fair Dealing' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Canada's Copyright Law. The material in this Post is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
     The Canadian Copyright Act provides that "fair dealing" with any material protected by copyright for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, review or news reporting is not an infringement of copyright. Fair dealing with a work does not require the permission of the copyright owner or the payment of royalties.
    205


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  •  03-12-2008, 2:54 PM

    Re: President's Choice Toddler pear juices

    I recognize this warning...I see someone else uses Kijiji
    The greatest pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do.
  •  03-12-2008, 2:57 PM

    Re: President's Choice Toddler pear juices

    just.me wrote:
    I recognize this warning...I see someone else uses Kijiji

    Nope,,,never even been there...

    I get mine off News Sites...Big Smile [:D]


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  •  03-12-2008, 3:06 PM

    Re: President's Choice Toddler pear juices

    Someone posted this warning a couple hours ago on there
    The greatest pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do.
  •  03-12-2008, 4:34 PM

    Re: President's Choice Toddler pear juices

    Well I'm glad to hear that I'm not the only, kind, caring , considerate, etc..etc..person around ..Embarrassed [:$]
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  •  04-16-2008, 6:33 PM

    water bottles containing BPA

     

    With Credit to Redfox for the Tip on this Post.

    Thanks



     

    Canadian News

     
          

         
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    Canadian stores race to purge bisphenol A products

    HBC, Forzani Group leading the charge

     


    Globe and Mail

    In reaction to a Globe and Mail report that Health Canada is poised to take action on bisphenol A, or BPA, the widely used compound in polycarbonate plastic, Forzani Group Ltd. , one of Canada's largest sporting goods retailers, issued a statement saying it has replaced all water bottles containing BPA in its stores with alternatives that do not contain the substance. Hudson's Bay Co., which includes the Bay and Zellers, e-mailed a statement to The Canadian Press saying it would do likewise. Both retailers plan to offer refunds to customers.

    Later yesterday, Canadian Tire Corp. Ltd. announced that it too will remove plastic water bottles and food-storage containers that are known to contain BPA from all Canadian Tire, Mark's Work Wearhouse and PartSource stores.

    Bob Sartor, chief executive officer of Forzani, which has more than 500 stores across Canada including Sport Check, Athlete's World and Coast Mountain Sports, told The Canadian Press that yesterday's Globe and Mail report was "sufficient cause to take the high road and get it off the shelf. We are doing this out of an overabundance of caution."

     

    The retail moves come as a key U.S. government agency that evaluates harmful substances released a draft report linking exposures to BPA to breast cancer and the earlier age of puberty in girls. The report, by the National Toxicology Program of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was issued yesterday and indicates that there is rising concern about BPA at regulatory bodies in both the United States and Canada.

    Health Canada is expected to issue a risk assessment this week that BPA is a potentially dangerous chemical, a move that could lead to some restrictions in its use, particularly for consumer applications that are likely to come into direct contact with foods or beverages.

    The action by the Canadian government would be the first by any country to label the chemical used for decades in everything from baby bottles and the lacquer linings inside tin cans to dental sealants a possible health hazard.

     

    The Canadian assessment process is far ahead of that of the United States, which is at a preliminary stage.

    Governments are reviewing the safety of BPA because its molecular shape is similar to estrogen, which allows it to mimic the female hormone in living things. It is also biologically active at extremely low concentrations, just like natural hormones, leading to concerns that the tiny amounts leaching from food and beverage containers could be a health threat.

    Dozens of studies by independent researchers have linked low exposure to BPA in animal and test-tube experiments to illnesses, such as cancer, that are thought to have an origin in hormone imbalances, although industry-funded studies haven't been able to find the same effects.

    Injection tests, which deliver the chemical directly to the blood stream, have been controversial because most adult human exposures are through food, leading much of the BPA to be turned into a harmless compound by liver enzymes. Consequently, the plastics industry had discounted injection experiments as having little applicability to people.

    But the program concluded that injection studies are a valid way to test the effects of BPA during childhood, when the liver's ability to produce the enzymes to detoxify the chemical isn't fully developed.

    The report also found that "estimated exposures [of BPA] in pregnant women and fetuses, infants, and children are similar" to the levels used in many low-dose animal experiments that have found effects on the brain and behaviour, prostate and mammary gland development, and early onset of sexual maturity in females.

    It concluded that "the possibility that human development may be altered by bisphenol A at current exposure levels cannot be dismissed."

     
     
    The affected bottles will have a Recycle triangle on the bottom with #7 in it.
     
    Please note that the Number in that Triangle is an indicater of the Bottles recycleability.
    Up until now only bottles that had a 7 or higher were safe enough to be used by people to use as their own refilable bottle.
     
     
     
     
    The ones with a 7 contain BPA. #3 is PVC and #6 is Polystyrene all of which can leach toxic chemicals. Here is a good page on that: http://www.momknowsbest.ca/en/latest-news/c377976190/index.html
    ===========================

    This Post contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific,  social and criminal justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes  'fair dealings' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Canada's Copyright Law. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a  interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
     The Canadian Copyright Act provides that dealing with any material protected by copyright for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, review or news reporting is not an infringement of copyright. Fair dealing with a work does not require the permission of the copyright owner or the payment of royalties.

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  •  04-16-2008, 7:04 PM

    Re: water bottles containing BPA

    Here is more information I found on Plastic.

    Toxic Plastic Baby Bottles

    Research Shows Bisphenol A Leeches from Infant Bottles

    © Sandra Williams

    Baby Bottle, Rogener Pavinski

    Bisphenol A was found in many popular baby bottles. Since it's a hormone disruptor no level is considered safe and many are calling for a ban on it.

    We have been bombarded with plastic in everything for years but people are beginning to question the chemicals that go into products.

    • Baby bottles and toys made out of polycarbonate plastic have been the focus of a lot of scrutiny because this type of plastic contains the hormone disruptor bisphenol A.
    • According to a report on a scientific study (Toxic Baby Bottles, Rachel L. Gibson, 2007) five of the more popular brands of baby bottles were tested and they all leached levels of bisphenol A that were unacceptable. No level is considered safe but the varying levels of bisphenol A found in the bottles went from 5 to 10ppb (parts per billion).

    About Bisphenol A

    Bisphenol A is a toxic hormone disruptor and has been linked to cancer, hyperactivity, birth defects, diabetes, lowered sperm count and early onset of puberty. It has also been associated with impaired immune systems and even obesity although further studies are needed. In many cases, laws are outdated so manufacturers are not required to prove the chemicals are safe.

    The polycarbonate plastic breaks down so leeches into formula and/or food. This process happens faster when the plastic is heated, washed or an acidic food or drink is used.

    Safer Suggestions and Options

    • Glass bottles are considered much safer and are quite sturdy so switching to glass is a sensible option.
    • For sippy cups, several companies offer stainless steel sippy cup options. Klean Kanteen and Thermos are two examples.
    • If you are using plastic bottles or containers, stay away from anything marked with the letters PC. You will usually see that near the recycling symbol if it’s there.
    • Polycarbonate plastics are also marked number 7 along with the recycling symbols. Safer plastics are usually softer and opaque while the bottles made with polycarbonate plastic are very hard and clear or tinted.
    • Avoid canned food or cut down as much as possible. Bisphenol A is in some of the plastic used in the lining of cans.
    • Avoid heating plastic bottles and containers in the microwave. Glass containers are better options.
    • For toys, it’s just as important to make sure safer plastics are used because they all have the potential to end up in a small child’s mouth. There are many wooden toys that are much safer and in some cases much more attractive.

    Environmental organizations along with parents in the U.S. and Canada are calling to ban baby bottles made with polycarbonate plastic. While some manufacturers say findings are exaggerated and biased, there are safer alternatives. It would be in everyone’s best interest for them to phase out plastics containing bisphenol A.

    Sources: Toxic Baby Bottles: Rachel L. Gibson, Environment California Research and Policy Center, 2007,The Toxic Nation Guide to Toxic Baby Bottles, (PDF),2007,Environmental Working Group: A Survey of Bisphenol A in U.S. Canned Foods, March 5, 2007,Baby’s Toxic Bottle: Bisphenol A Leaching from Popular Baby Bottles, The Work Group for Safe Markets

    http://pollution-control.suite101.com/article.cfm/toxic_plastic_baby_bottles



  •  04-16-2008, 7:12 PM

    Re: water bottles containing BPA


     
         
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    There is a number written on the bottom of every plastic bottle, which varies from one to seven.

    It’s actually nothing to do with the number of recycling of the bottles. It’s just the type of plastic which is used for that particular bottle. 5 is polypropylene and 1 is PET that is polyethlyene terephthalate. The numbers below is useful while sorting the collected bottles while recycling. In other words it is plastic identification number.

    1 - PET, polyethlyene terephthalate
    2 - HDPE, high-density polyethylene
    3 - PVC, polyvinyl chloride
    4 - LDPE, low-density polyethylene
    5 - PP, polypropylene
    6 - PS/PS-E, polystyrene / expanded polystyrene
    7 - OTHER, resins or multi-materials

     

     

     

     

     

    Did you know chemical released by plastic water bottles can cause cancer

    (It is not the water that affecting you but the chemical releasing from the bottle)


    ===========================

    This Post contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific,  social and criminal justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes  'fair dealings' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Canada's Copyright Law. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a  interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
     The Canadian Copyright Act provides that dealing with any material protected by copyright for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, review or news reporting is not an infringement of copyright. Fair dealing with a work does not require the permission of the copyright owner or the payment of royalties.

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    - Albert Einstein -

  •  04-18-2008, 6:01 PM

    Re: water bottles containing BPA

    Now THAT is very worth while posting and I hope everyone will tell someone this.

    Pity that they didn't warn people years ago.


  •  04-30-2008, 6:58 PM

    Re: water bottles containing BPA

    For anyone interested there are a number of videos and articles on the whole BPA and antimony chemical leaching issue on this site: http://www.plasticfreebottles.com


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