He refers to it as a "weekly communication" that will give us his "inside view". I'm hoping.
Update: He doesn't accept comments. That would be a highlight of his blog. However, his boss accepts comments: HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt's Blog.
"Would rubbing a slice of lemon on the peeled melon kill any transferred salmonella?"He doesn't address your question exactly, but Trevor Suslow at the University of California, Davis, put together a paper this week (posted yesterday, possibly motivated by the Honduran incident) that focuses on the home-cleaning issue:
Are These Wash Steps Necessary?
"Unfortunately, we can’t truly answer this most reasonable question."
"No difference," said Bart Stupak, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee's oversight subcommittee.Irradiation kills E. coli, salmonella, and other microorganisms - good and bad.
"No difference," agreed Rep. John Shimkus, R-Ill. "I think Popeye would approve."
"When we have widespread use of irradiation of our food supply, it will also be listed as a pillar of public health," said Olson, an expert on irradiation. He compared the technology to pasteurizing milk with heat.The FDA approved irradiation of meat and poultry in 1999. According to its website, it also allows its use in a few other foods, including fresh fruits, vegetables, and spices. It's now considering whether to approve its wider use in produce. The FDA's director of food additive safety released a statement on March 12th saying the produce irradiation issue was a "high priority."
"Soil and water testing has shown Salinas Valley is teeming with E. coli."
- Dr. Kevin Reilly, California Department of Health, Should We Irradiate Fruits And Vegetables?
"The capacity of Salmonella enterica serovar Newport to contaminate Romaine lettuce (Lactuca sativa L. cv. Nogal) via the root system was evaluated in 17-, 20-, and 33-day-old plants. Apparent internalization of Salmonella via the root to the above-ground parts was identified in 33- but not 17- or 20-day-old plants and was stimulated by root decapitation. Leaves of lettuce plants with intact and damaged roots harbored Salmonella at 500 ± 120 and 5,130 ± 440 CFU/g of leaf, respectively, at 2 days postinoculation but not 5 days later. These findings are first to suggest that Salmonella Newport can translocate from contaminated roots to the aerial parts of lettuce seedlings and propose that the process is dependent on the developmental stage of the plant."It looks like conditions have to be ripe for leaf contamination ... tainted soil, roots attached, longer growing period ... but it's not far-fetched. And I'm guessing organic produce is not immune.
"So it goes."
- Billy Pilgrim 1
"The [USDA's] commodity farm program effectively forbids farmers who usually grow corn or the other four federally subsidized commodity crops (soybeans, rice, wheat and cotton) from trying fruit and vegetables."There are big penalties for farmers who break this rule, as Jack found out.
"National fruit and vegetable growers based in California, Florida and Texas fear competition from regional producers. ... Through their control of Congressional delegations from those states, they have been able to virtually monopolize the country’s fresh produce markets."With obstacles like this, it doesn't look like organic, locally-grown fruits and vegetables will be seeing a bumper crop anytime soon.