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To: kap who wrote (2787)3/11/1998 7:33:00 AM
From: Aishwarya  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4356
 
Thanks Kap !! Follows the original excert from AP.

Radiation kills microbes in food, but consumers are wary
by Curt Anderson
The Associated Press

GURNEE, Ill. - Behind 6-foot-thick concrete walls, slender rods of cobalt-60 cast a bluish glow in a deep underground pool of water,
awaiting another batch of medical equipment to sterilize.
The boxes of scalpel blades and sutures rattle into the room in big metal crates hung from tracks in the ceiling. The cobalt-60 rises
from its 23-foot depth, emitting gamma rays that silently destroy
bacteria.
This plant north of Chicago, run by SteriGenics International Inc., is one of about 50 in the United States using gamma rays or electron beams to decontaminate health-care equipment, cosmetic ingredients, spices and some foods.
Now, SteriGenics and other companies want to zap the beef, pork
and chicken that wind up on millions of American dinner tables.
But although the federal government's December approval of
irradiation in red meat was touted as technology's best weapon
against dangerous microbes such as E. coli and salmonella, it
appears unlikely the process will be used widely in this country anytime soon, if ever.
"I think it's about 50-50," said Dr. Richard Louria, chairman of the Department of Preventative Medicine at the New Jersey School of
Medicine. "Could you potentially save 1,000 or 2,000 deaths? I
think you could. But the opponents could persuade people that
nuking your food is bad."
At a recent meat-industry conference in suburban Chicago, the
numerous barriers facing meat companies re apparent. No major
meat company has public plans to take the leap, partly out of fear
of consumer backlash and protests by anti-nuclear groups.
For similar reasons, irradiation never took off for poultry, which has
had approval since 1992.
"They're all waiting to be the best No. 2," said Al Kober,
merchandising manager of Clemens Markets, a Pennsylvania
grocery chain. "One of the big packers has got to step to the plate.
they would set the stage for the rest."
The meat industry is searching for improved safety after last
summer's recall of 25 million pounds of ground beef suspected of
E. coli contamination.
"There's a resounding demand out there that the food industry clean
up its act," said Sheila Courington of the Wirthlin Worldwide polling
group.
The federal Food and Drug Administration and numerous other
researchers have found no evidence that irradiation causes toxic
changes or radioactive residue in meat or poultry. However, the
process can cause odor and color changes in meat - pork, for
instance, can turn bright red - although controlling temperature and
levels of oxygen can reduce those changes.
Meat is also a prime source of the vitamin thiamin, which is highly
sensitive to irradiation. Researchers have documented losses of
vitamins A, C, E and B in some irradiated foods, but supporters
say a person eating a well-rounded diet would still get enough.
Labeling and marketing problems also remain. FDA rules require all
irradiated foods to be clearly noted as such and to include the green
international radura symbol.
"There are things inherent just in the word 'irradiation' that scare people," Courington said.
Research presented at the conference indicates that when
consumers believe irradiation makes food safer, they're more willing
to buy it, even at higher prices.

Shuffling terms
Polling indicates it would be a big mistake for meat companies to
mask its use by calling it something else - "cold pasteurization" is
one suggested euphemism.
"To change the term provides ammunition to those who oppose the
technology because it appears you're hiding something," said
Christine Bruhn, director of the Center for Consumer Research at
the University of California-Davis.
In addition, meat companies must grapple with whether to build
their own on-site facilities for $14 million or more or use existing
plants, and how to get needed federal and state nuclear permits.
Community or activist opposition is another concern.
Irradiation has advantages for the industry, including a longer shelf life for food. But a company's estimated cost increase from the
process ranges from 3 cents to 7 cents a pound. Some of that
could be passed on to consumers.
As the industry weighs these factors, many stores and scientists
compare the debate to one decades ago about pasteurization of
milk, which is universally accepted today.

Regards,
Sri