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WASHINGTON---Think you’re savvy about food safety? That you wash your hands well, scrub away germs, cook your meat properly?
Guess again.
Scientists put cameras in the kitchens of 100 families in Logan, Utah.
What was caught on tape in this middle-class, well-educated college town
suggests why food poisoning hits so many Americans.
People skipped
soap when hand-washing. Used the same towel to wipe up raw meat juice as
to dry their hands. Made a salad without washing the lettuce.
Undercooked the meat loaf. One even tasted the marinade in which
bacteria-ridden raw fish had soaked.
Not to mention the mom who handled raw chicken and then fixed her infant a bottle without washing her hands.
Or another mom who merely rinsed(沖洗) her baby’s juice bottle after it
fell into raw eggs---no soap against the salmonella(沙門氏菌) that can
lurk(潛伏) in eggs.
“Shocking,” was Utah State University nutritionist Janet Anderson’s reaction.
Specialists
call this typical of the average U.S. household: Everybody commits at
least some safety sins(罪惡) when they are hurried, distracted by fussy
children or ringing phones, simply not thinking about germs. Even
Anderson made changes in her kitchen after watching the tapes.
The
Food and Drug Administration funded Anderson’s $50,000 study to detect
how cooks slip up. The goal is to improve consumers’ knowledge of how to
protect themselves from the food poisoning that strikes 76 million
Americans each year.
“One of the great barriers in getting people to
change is they think they’re doing such a good job already,” said FDA
consumer research chief Alan Levy.
Surveys show most Americans blame
restaurants for food-borne illnesses. Asked if they follow basic
bacteria-fighting tips---listed on the Internet at
www.fightbac.org---most insist they’re careful in their kitchens.
Levy says most food poisonings probably occur at home. The videotapes
suggest why. People have no idea that they’re messing up, Anderson said.
“You just go in the kitchen, and it’s something you don’t think about.”
She described preliminary(初步的) study results at a food meeting last
week. Having promised the families anonymity, she didn’t show the tapes.
For $50 and free groceries, families agreed to be filmed. Their
kitchens looked clean and presumably(perhaps) they were on their best
behavior, but they didn’t know it was a safety study. Hoping to see
real-life hygiene, scientists called the experiment “market research” on
how people cooked a special recipe.
Scientists bought ingredients
for a salad plus either Mexican meat loaf, marinaded halibut or
herb-breaded chicken breasts with mustard sauce---recipes designed to
catch safety slip-ups.
Cameras started rolling as the cooks put away the groceries.
There was mistake No. 1: Only a quarter stored raw meat and seafood on
the refrigerator’s bottom shelf so other foods don’t get
contaminated(污染) by dripping juices.
Mistake No. 2: Before starting
to cook, only 45 percent washed their hands. Of those, 16 percent didn’t
use soap. You’re supposed to wash hands often while cooking, especially
after handling raw meat. But on average, each cook skipped seven times
that Anderson said they should have washed. Only a third consistently
used soap---many just rinsed and wiped their hands on a dish towel. That
dish towel became Anderson’s nightmare. Using paper towels to clean up
raw meat juice is safest. But dozens wiped the countertop(臺(tái)面板) with that
cloth dish towel---further spreading germs the next time they dried
their hands.
Thirty percent didn’t wash the lettuce; others placed salad ingredients on meat-contaminated counters.
Scientists checked the finished meal with thermometers, and Anderson
found “alarming” results: 35 percent who made the meat loaf undercooked
it, 42 percent undercooked the chicken and 17 percent undercooked the
fish.
Must you use a thermometer? Anderson says just because the meat
isn’t pink doesn’t always mean it got hot enough to kill bacteria.
Anderson’s study found gaps in food-safety campaigns. FDA’s “Fight Bac”
antibacterial program doesn’t stress washing vegetables. Levy calls
those dirty dish towels troubling; expect more advice stressing paper
towels.
Anderson’s main message: “If people would simply wash their
hands and clean food surfaces after handling raw meat, so many of the
errors would be taken care of.”
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