Tag Archives: food standards agency

UK – FSA – The 2015 Chicken Challenge

FSA imagesCAYZ5I84food_standards_agency_logo

We pledge to do our bit to cut campylobacter food poisoning in half….see the web page!

Research UK – FSA – Food and You Survey 2014

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This summary presents the key findings from Wave 3 of the Food and You survey, commissioned by the Food Standards Agency (FSA or the Agency). The Food and You survey is used to collect information about reported behaviours, attitudes and knowledge relating to food safety issues. It provides data on people’s reports of their food purchasing, storage, preparation, consumption and factors that may affect these, such as eating habits, influences on where respondents choose to eat out and experiences of food poisoning.

FSA

 

Research – UK – Campylobacter After the Storm

Meat Info Campylobacter

I get the impression that, before releasing the campylobacter poultry meat supermarket statistics to an expectant world, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) looked over the parapet and had a slight change of heart. It was as if it had suddenly realised that it was set up to prevent food scares by scientifically assessing and communicating food-related risks, not to start hares running.

See Norman Bagley Article at the link above

Research – FSA – UK – Campylobacter Survey: Cumulative Results from the First Nine Months

FSA food_standards_agency_logo

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) has today published the latest set of results from its year-long survey of campylobacter on fresh chickens. Campylobacter is a food bug mainly found on raw poultry and is the biggest cause of food poisoning in the UK.

The results are published for the first time as Official Statistics and the full report can be found via the link on this page. Cumulative results for samples taken between February and November 2014 have now been published, including results presented by major retailer.

 

Information : Campylobacter Website Launched for Consumers

Meat Info Campylobacter

A new consumer website which offers advice on preventing campylobacter has been launched by poultry bodies. As campylobacter continues to hit the headlines – most recently the Food Standards Agency (FSA) advised consumers to bag chicken separately in the fridge – the website, www.campylobacter.org.uk, aims to raise awareness for consumers and provide transparency for the poultry industry.

 

UK – Holiday Updates in Brief – Campylobacter – E.coli – MRSA

Leicester Mercury : Leicester diners placed at “unnecessary risk” say Food Standards Agency

Food Poisoning Bulletin : Raw Milk Not For Kids, Warns England’s FSA After E. coli Outbreaks

Food Safety News : E. Coli Sickens 85 in UK While Source Remains Unknown

Food Safety News :FSA Chastises UK Retailers for Resisting Release of Campylobacter Stats

Food Safety News : UK Research Shows MRSA Transfers From Livestock to Humans

 

UK – FSA – How Twitter can Reduce the Spread of Norovirus

The Guardian 

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) has embarked on a social media listening project that, it hopes, has the potential to predict outbreaks of the winter vomiting bug, norovirus, earlier than ever before.

FSA’s social media team sifted through Twitter data from the last norovirus outbreak during the winter of 2012-13, hunting for spikes in certain related key words and phrases being used in tweets. They then compared the frequency of the key words to the number of lab reports of confirmed norovirus cases in the same period.

They found significant correlations between spikes in the number of lab reports and spikes in conversations on Twitter using words and hashtags such as #winterbug, #norovirus, sickness bug, winter virus and vomiting.

UK – FSA – Update on Campylobacter Survey Publication

FSA imagesCAYZ5I84

The Food Standards Agency has today confirmed its plans for publishing the quarterly results from its survey of campylobacter on shop-bought chicken. The FSA will name retailers, alongside campylobacter levels, when it releases its next set of results in November.

UK – PHE Investigation into Salmonella Outbreak

GOV.UK

Public Health England (PHE) is investigating a national outbreak of a type of Salmonella Enteritidis which has affected 156 people.

To date, 55 cases have seen in Hampshire, 25 in London, 33 in Cheshire and Merseyside, and 43 in the West Midlands. Cases have also been seen in Austria and France.

In England, the cases occurred as isolated clusters over several months and have been managed locally, but are now being reassessed as potentially linked under a national investigation.

Dr Paul Cleary, a consultant epidemiologist leading the PHE investigation, said:

We are working with our colleagues across PHE, the Food Standards Agency, in local authorities and with other public health organisations in Europe to investigate the cause of this outbreak.

We are making good progress and hope to have more conclusive evidence shortly. We will continue to monitor the situation and if there is any further public health action necessary then we will ensure that this takes place.

Testing using genetic typing methods has revealed that all of the cases are infected with closely related strains, indicating that the cause of the illness is from a single source. Some food and environmental samples from catering outlets have tested positive for Salmonella with the same genetic profile as seen in the outbreak cases.

Salmonella Enteritidis is a strain of bacteria that causes gastrointestinal illness and is often associated with poultry or eggs. Symptoms include diarrhoea, stomach cramps and sometimes vomiting and fever. Symptoms are self-limiting and most people recover without treatment although it is important to remain hydrated.

FSA – Recall Mars Chocolate Drink – Bacillus spp

FSA

Mars Chocolate Drinks is recalling branded bottles of sports-cap drinks and 750ml milk drink products with ‘best before’ dates between and including 19 December 2014 and 11 April 2015. This is because they contain a type of the bacteria known as Bacillus, which can cause food poisoning. This means the products are a possible health risk to consumers.

FSA

The Food Standards Agency has been informed by Mars Chocolate Drinks that it is recalling certain date codes of its milk drinks. This is because they contain elevated levels of a type of bacteria known as Bacillus, which can cause food poisoning. This means the products are a possible health risk to consumers.