Deadly listeria could
herald tighter food safety rules in South Africa
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[March 16, 2018] By
Kate Kelland, Health and Science Correspondent
LONDON, March 16 (Reuters) - A huge and
deadly outbreak of listeria in South Africa could alter the country's
approach to food-borne disease and prompt improvements in food safety
standards, a leading health official said on Friday.
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The World Health Organization's top specialist on global food safety
likened the South African outbreak's potential impact to the "mad
cow disease" BSE crisis in Europe that began in the 1980s and a vast
E-coli outbreak traced to "Jack in the Box" burgers in the United
States in 1993.
"I'm convinced we're going to be talking about this outbreak for the
next 20 years," Peter Ben Embarek, who manages the WHO International
Food Safety Authorities Network, told Reuters.
"This could be the crisis that will finally make at least South
Africa - and possibly the whole of Africa - realize the importance
of food safety and food-borne diseases and the need to invest in
improving things."
At least 180 people have been killed in South Africa since January
last year and almost 1,000 infected in the world’s worst recorded
listeria outbreak.
Health authorities there say the disease – which in severe cases can
cause fatal bloodstream infections and meningitis – is likely to
claim more victims before it is brought under control.
In the 1993 "Jack in the Box" outbreak, 732 people - most of them
children under 10 - were infected with Escherichia coli traced to
back to contamination in the restaurant chain's "Monster Burger"
sandwiches. Four died and more than 170 others suffered permanent
injuries including kidney and brain damage.
Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease, which is
linked to the brain-wasting Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, was
first detected in Britain in the late 1980s. It spread from there to
other parts of Europe and ravaging cattle herds until the early
2000s.
Both events sparked heightened consumer fears about food-borne
illnesses, altering shopping and eating habits and prompted a
tightening of regulations covering the way foods are processed,
stored and cooked.
Ben Embarek said there are still many unanswered questions in South
Africa's listeria outbreak, which health officials have linked to
polony – a type of processed sausage meat - made by Tiger Brands.
The company says it has appointed an expert team to identify the
causes of the outbreak.
ONE OUTBREAK?
One line needing further investigation, he said, was whether there
might be more than one outbreak occurring at the same time. The
majority of the cases identified and tested so far have been caused
by a strain of listeria known as ST6, but around 9 percent have been
found to involve other strains.
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"The question is whether the polony product linked to the main
strain in the outbreak was also full of different strains at the
same time, and they were only picked up by chance in some cases, or
whether those cases are linked to other products carrying different
strains," Ben Embarek said.
"It's still early days to say one way or another."
Besides Tiger Foods, South African authorities are also
investigating a plant owned by RCL Foods that makes a similar
sausage product. RCL said independent tests had not found any traces
of listeria.
South Africa's processed meat market grew about 8 percent in 2017 to
a retail value of $412 million, according to Euromonitor
International. Tiger Brands has a 35.7 percent market share,
followed by Eskort Bacon Co-Operative with 21.8 percent. Rhodes
Food, RCL Foods and Astral Foods each have less than 5 percent.
Health officials have been criticized for taking so long to begin to
pinpoint the possible sources of the listeria outbreak, which began
in January 2017. Around 40 percent of cases have been in newborn
babies, a factor Ben Embarek said would be due to the incubating
infection being passed from the mother in the final few weeks of
pregnancy.
Tracing listeria outbreak sources is tricky because the disease can
have an incubation period of several weeks, and because the
suspected foods - ready-to-eat processed meat products - are so
widely consumed.
Asking people who may eat such meats almost every day to remember
which type or brand they might have consumed two or three weeks ago
is dogged by uncertainty.
Ben Embarek said these were a few of "probably many factors" that
have come together to create such a large outbreak.
"We also have a situation where the control and food safety
assurance within the production environment is probably not yet
where it should be," he said. "It's a developing economy, so there
are newcomers in the sector that may or may not be on top of how to
manage safety in a food production environment."
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; editing by Giles Elgood)
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