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US Meat Industry Says Beef Safer than Ever, Refuses to Publish Inspection Tests

US companies have made significant progress over the past decade in making meat safer but should not be obliged to publish inspection test results, said the head of a leading trade body this week.

J. Patrick Boyle, president and CEO of the American Meat Institute (AMI), said the large reduction in E.coli cases over the past 10 years was directly linked to heavy investment by the meat industry in safety research.

Speaking on CNN's Larry King Live show this week, he said: "These illnesses are down 60 percent in the last 10 years. And the reason for that reduction in E. coli related illnesses is because the incidence of that pathogen in our beef products has dropped by 45 percent during that same 10-year period and that's not just a random development. It's because of investment, technology, research, more sophisticated process control. So we are making significant progress in taking a very safe food supply and making it even safer."

E.coli figures disputed

He said the meat industry had invested "tens of millions of dollars" over the past decade on research programmes to make its products safer.

Boyle was part of a panel that included food safety lawyer Bill Marler, former U.S. Department of Agriculture Undersecretary for Food Safety Elsa A. Murano, and Barbara Kowalcyk, director of food safety at the Center for Foodborne Illness Research and Prevention.

Both Marler and Kowalcyk challenged the AMI's president's assessment of the figures, with the former saying there had been "a pretty significant increase over the last three years" of E.coli related illnesses and deaths.

Kowalcyk said Boyle's 60 per cent reduction claim was "misleading" and a "misuse of data" that she believed came from USDA's regulatory testing program. She added this was not designed "to give us an idea of what the prevalence of pathogens in the food supply are" or supply year to year comparisons. 


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