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Saturday, March 2, 2024

A Sense of Doubt blog post #3301 - Tainted Applesauce




A Sense of Doubt blog post #3301 - Tainted Applesauce


I eat applesauce every day, but it's unsweetened and without cinnamon.

Still, this is a shocking story about a company's irresponsibility and putting children at risk.

Thanks for tuning in.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/27/world/europe/lead-applesauce-food-safety.html


Lead-Tainted Applesauce Sailed Through Gaps in Food-Safety System

Hundreds of American children were poisoned last year. Records show how, time and again, the contamination went unnoticed.

Christina Jewett and 

This article was reported in collaboration with The Examination, a nonprofit newsroom that covers global public health.



Cinnamon-flavored applesauce pouches sold in grocery and dollar stores last year poisoned hundreds of American children with extremely high doses of lead, leaving anxious parents to watch for signs of brain damage, developmental delays and seizures.

The Food and Drug Administration, citing Ecuadorean investigators, said a spice grinder was likely responsible for the contamination and said the quick recall of three million applesauce pouches protected the food supply.

But hundreds of pages of documents obtained by The New York Times and the nonprofit health newsroom The Examination, along with interviews with government and company officials in multiple countries, show that in the weeks and months before the recall, the tainted applesauce sailed through a series of checkpoints in a food-safety system meant to protect American consumers.

The documents and interviews offer the clearest accounting to date of the most widespread toxic exposure in food marketed to young children in decades. Children in 44 states ate the tainted applesauce, some of which contained lead at extraordinarily high levels.

Time and again, the tainted cinnamon went untested and undiscovered, the result of an overstretched F.D.A. and a food-safety law that gives companies, at home and abroad, wide latitude on what toxins to look for and whether to test.

“It’s amazing in a bad sense what a catastrophic failure this was,” said Neal Fortin, director of the Institute for Food Laws and Regulations at Michigan State University. “Largely, the food supply regulatory system is based on an honor system.”

The cinnamon originated in Sri Lanka and was shipped to Ecuador, where it was ground into a powder. It was probably there, the F.D.A. has said, that the cinnamon was likely contaminated with lead chromate, a powder that is sometimes illegally used to tint or bulk up spices.

The ground cinnamon was then sold, bagged and sold again to a company called Austrofood, which blended it into applesauce and shipped pouches to the United States. It was sold under the brand name WanaBana and various generic store labels.


Austrofood, based in Sangolquí, Ecuador, did not test the finished applesauce, records show, before it was loaded up and shipped to the United States.Credit...Ana María Buitrón for The New York Times


Austrofood never tested the cinnamon or its tainted applesauce for lead before shipping it to the United States. The company said it relied on a certificate from a supplier saying the cinnamon was virtually lead free, records show. In a statement, the supplier, Negasmart, did not discuss that certification but said it had complied with all regulations and quality standards.

The F.D.A. can inspect overseas food companies that ship to the United States, but even as food imports soared to record levels in 2022, international inspections fell far short of targets set by law.

American inspectors had not visited Austrofood in five years, records show.

“Companies have the responsibility to take steps to assure that the products they manufacture are not contaminated with unsafe levels of heavy metals,” Jim Jones, the top F.D.A. food official, said in a statement. “The agency’s job is to help the industry comply and hold those who evade these requirements accountable, as appropriate.”

The F.D.A. says it has no authority to investigate far down the international supply chain. Records show that the Ecuadorean government had the authority but not the capacity. Ecuadorean regulators had never before tested cinnamon for toxins and, when the F.D.A. called looking for help, nearly half of the government’s lab equipment was out of service, said Daniel Sánchez, the head of Ecuador’s food safety agency.

Private safety audits commissioned by American importers are supposed to provide another layer of protection. But audits typically look only for the hazards that the importers themselves have identified.

None of the importers would say whether they considered lead a risk or tested for it and it is unclear what, if any, steps they took. But none blocked the applesauce. Records show one auditor gave the applesauce maker an A+ safety rating in December, as American children were being poisoned.

The F.D.A. has the power to test food arriving at the border. There is no indication that anyone tested the applesauce when it arrived at ports in Miami and Baltimore. Inspectors conduct about half as many such tests as they did a decade ago.

The F.D.A. said it planned to analyze the incident and whether it needs to seek new powers from Congress to prevent future outbreaks.


An F.D.A. scientist testing lactose for the presence of melamine in 2010.Credit...Michael J. Ermarth/U.S. Food and Drug Administration



Federal regulations have warned for years about the risk of tampering with food ingredients.

Changes to the food-safety system were born out of a late 2000s scandal in China, where people used cheap, toxic melamine powder in place of protein powder in baby formula and pet food. Six babies in China and hundreds of dogs in the United States died.

As new laws on imported food took shape, lobbyists for grocery stores and food companies worked to weaken them. Scott Faber, a former lobbyist for the Grocery Manufacturers Association, recalls fending off proposals for more sampling, testing and reporting.

“Our argument at the time was that too much product would be destroyed if you had to do more testing and sampling,” Mr. Faber said. “And clearly babies and toddlers are paying the price for the industry’s success.” He is now a senior official at the Environmental Working Group, where he advocates stricter oversight of the food supply.

Heather Garlich, a spokeswoman for the food industry association FMI, declined to comment on the applesauce recall. “The U.S. is a global leader in food safety due to strong governmental oversight, critical public-private partnerships, and industry initiatives,” Ms. Garlich said.

Food-safety policy is always a balancing act. It would be impossible for F.D.A. agents to open every imported crate of produce or spices and test for every possible contaminant. Every new requirement on companies adds cost to the food.

But critics like Mr. Faber say that the F.D.A. has ceded too much oversight to the companies.

The Food Safety Modernization Act, signed into law in 2011 by President Barack Obama, gave the F.D.A. the power to recall food, trace produce and reject food from foreign companies that turn away American inspectors.

One major change was to require importers to audit their suppliers. Exactly how those companies acted during the applesauce incident remains unclear. F.D.A. data shows that thousands of importers do not audit appropriately.

The law did not come close to putting the F.D.A., which oversees shelf-stable food, cheese and fresh produce, on par with the Department of Agriculture, the other major food regulator. Agriculture inspectors work inside every American meat-processing plant and allow meat imports only from countries with rigorous safety systems.

The F.D.A. asked Congress in 2022 for the authority to set heavy-metal limits and require baby-food makers to test for them — changes that might have prevented last year’s poisoning. Congress did not act.

A Mother Demands Answers

 

Thomas Duong and Nicole Peterson worked with the local health department in North Carolina to figure out why the lead levels in their children’s blood had surged.Credit...Jesse Barber for The New York Times

The tainted applesauce might have gone unnoticed for even longer had it not been for a family in North Carolina.

Early last summer, Nicole Peterson and Thomas Duong were alarmed by their young children’s blood-lead levels in a routine screening. Within weeks, the levels had doubled.

Ms. Peterson said the couple worked with the local health department as they tried to determine what could be hurting their children. We “weren’t sleeping and we’re not eating — like this is driving us crazy,” said Ms. Peterson. She and her husband are suing Dollar Tree, where they bought the applesauce, and WanaBana, a U.S. distributor led by Austrofood officers.

A Dollar Tree spokeswoman said the company is committed to the safety of the products it sells. Austrofood said that it had relied on its supplier’s certification and that none of its other products have been recalled.

Their 3-year-old daughter, a fierce, bright girl who loves twirly dresses and nail polish, had a blood-lead level of 24 micrograms per deciliter, nearly seven times the C.D.C.’s level of concern. Her younger brother, an easygoing toddler who loves noisy trucks and dance music, had reached a level of 21.

Public health investigators searched their home and day care, but failed to find the source. When the parents’ blood tests came back normal, they began to suspect one food that only the children ate: foil pouches of cinnamon applesauce.

North Carolina health officials tested them and found extraordinarily high lead levels.

That prompted the F.D.A. to act.

In late October, Austrofood recalled millions of applesauce pouches. The F.D.A. has said it believes that this measure eliminated the tainted cinnamon from the U.S. food supply.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 400 infants and toddlers were poisoned. The median test result was six times the level found in the water crisis caused by lead pipes a decade ago in Flint, Mich.

The exposure in Flint was more sustained, and its long-term effects have proved difficult to quantify. But years later, the number of students in the city who qualified for special education doubled.

Earlier this month, the F.D.A. said that Ecuadorean investigators believe the cinnamon was likely contaminated by Carlos Aguilera, who ran a spice mill. The Ecuadorean health agency filed an administrative complaint against Mr. Aguilera, saying he had operated without a permit and used broken machinery that increased the risk of impurities, records show. The complaint is pending.

Ecuadorean officials took packaged cinnamon from Mr. Aguilera’s customers that tested positive for lead, according to inspection reports and interviews.

But investigators found no contaminated cinnamon at Mr. Aguilera’s plant, records show. In an interview with reporters, he denied adding lead chromate.

Austrofood is not explicitly required to test its products for lead. Under F.D.A. regulations, companies must only identify likely food-safety hazards and develop plans to address them.

Austrofood had a plan, but lead was not among its anticipated risks, according to F.D.A. records.

After the lead poisoning, the F.D.A. cited Austrofood for failing to identify lead as a hazard, agency records show.






There is no record of the F.D.A. ever inspecting the original source of the cinnamon, and none of the other companies in the supply chain were eligible for F.D.A. inspections because they do not ship directly to the U.S.Credit...Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images



The industry was never supposed to entirely police itself. The food-safety law called for the F.D.A. to increase overseas oversight and conduct about 19,000 international food inspections annually.

The agency never came close to that target. Last year, records show that regulators conducted about 1,200 overseas inspections — visiting less than 1 percent of F.D.A.-registered international food makers.

When the Government Accountability Office flagged the problem in 2015, the F.D.A. cited insufficient funding and questioned “the usefulness of conducting that many inspections.” The accountability office recently said it was still waiting for the F.D.A. to say what it considered the appropriate number of inspections.

U.S. officials inspected Austrofood in 2019. It is not clear what testing they conducted, but trade records show that the company was not exporting cinnamon products to the United States, so the spice was likely not a factor in the inspection. Regulators found no problems that they advised fixing, records show.

Inspectors did not return until the lead poisoning was discovered nearly five years later.

There is no record of the F.D.A. ever inspecting the original source of the cinnamon, the Sri Lanka-based Samagi Spice Exports. Nanda Kohona, the company’s marketing director, said the company conducted its own lead tests.

None of the other companies in the cinnamon supply chain were eligible for F.D.A. inspections because they do not ship directly to the United States.

“I think the missing piece is having a totally independent regulatory agency checking up on the process, going in and doing inspections,” said Sarah Sorscher, director of regulatory affairs for the Center for Science in the Public Interest.

Ms. Peterson, the North Carolina mother whose persistence touched off the search, said she was relieved when the applesauce was discovered as the source of lead. But her family is now watching closely for developmental delays in their children.

Even low levels of lead exposure in children have been linked to hyperactivity, mood swings and deficits in reading and social skills.

“We just hope at the end of the day that our kids just are healthy and can stay healthy,” she said.

“They shouldn’t have to worry about what they eat. No one should.”

Genevieve Glatsky and Emiliano Rodríguez Mega contributed reporting.


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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2403.02 - 10:10

- Days ago = 3165 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I plan to continue Hey Mom posts at least twice per week but will continue to post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.

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