Dear FDA:
Each year, there are an estimated 48
million cases of people getting sick, 128,000 are hospitalized, and 3,000 of
those cases end up with the victim dying from food-borne illnesses in the United
States reported by the CDC. Restaurants are often the origin for transmission
of food-borne illnesses; in 2015, 60% of food-borne illness outbreaks were
connected with restaurants. There is also evidence that restaurants, play a
role in sporadic cases (cases not involved with the outbreak) of food-borne
illness. Instead of taking time from their day to make a proper meal people are
going out to all these restaurants for fast food or takeout putting them at a higher
risk of catching food-borne illnesses one of the major illnesses being Salmonella. Salmonella infection (salmonellosis) is a common bacterial disease that affects the intestinal
tract. Salmonella bacteria
typically live in animal and human intestines and are shed through feces.
Humans become infected most frequently through contaminated water or food.
Rates of the
Salmonella infection
in the United States have not decreased not increased within 20 years.
Restaurants are often times considered hotspots for Salmonella outbreaks and sporadic infections. Many studies have
examined the effect of posting letter grades for restaurant inspections on the
incidence of food-borne illness. One of the studies done was comparing Salmonella infection
rates in New York, New York, with those in the rest of New York state before
and after they have received a letter grade from restaurant inspections. The
results showed that after restaurants received the letter grade, the rate of Salmonella infections decreased 5.3% vs the rest of New York state
during 2011–2015. Posting restaurant inspection results as letter grades was
associated with a decline in Salmonella infections in New York City and grants consideration
for broader use.
A case that happened
in 2008 involved A Kansas family that sued
San Antonio Taco Co. over problems they experienced after eating
salmonella-infected food at the restaurant near Vanderbilt University last
August. The Metro Health Department received calls from more than 200 people
who said they had symptoms of food poisoning after eating at the popular
restaurant August 5th -7th. Health officials subsequently
confirmed that 11 of those people were infected with salmonella, but officials
said they could not pinpoint the exact cause of the outbreak. The restaurant's
management closed it voluntarily for an extensive cleaning on Aug. 12-13.
With the research I have
done I was able to determine a possible solution for the outbreak of salmonella
is to have an inspection made in restaurants more often because once the inspection
is made the restaurant workers may not make sure that the food is not cross contaminated
or that the restaurant is well maintained. There are many other ways to prevent
Salmonella for example: Avoid eating high-risk
foods, including raw or lightly cooked eggs, undercooked ground beef or poultry,
keep food properly refrigerated before cooking, clean hands with soap and warm
water before handling food, clean surfaces before preparing food on them, separate
cooked foods from ready-to-eat foods, and cook foods to a safe internal
temperature.
Sincerely,
Jesus Alamilla
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