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Medpagetoday.com REPORTS HERE that "based on a report from its Food Safety Working Group, the Obama administration is claiming progress -- if not perfection -- in its campaign to improve food safety. 'We're well on our way to building a modern food safety system,' Health and Human Service's Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said."

"In recent years, the U.S. has experienced illnesses associated with beef, peppers, peanut butter, spinach, eggs, and cookie dough, among other foods. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that one in six Americans suffers from a foodborne illness each year, resulting in 128,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths."

"An Institute of Medicine report from 2009 concluded that the FDA's method of preventing food borne illnesses was inadequate. But Sebelius said that with the passage of the Food Safety Modernization Act earlier this year, the federal government has improved in three key areas of food safety: Making food borne illness a priority; Improving surveillance to detect outbreaks earlier and respond more quickly; Beefing up enforcement efforts at food processing plants."

"Sebelius added that a new egg safety rule is expected to prevent 79,000 illnesses and save $1 billion each year."

"A recent report from the CDC found that the rate of E. coli infection has decreased across the past 15 years, but the rate of Salmonella infection has spiked in recent years."

"The federal government has created a website, www.foodsafety.gov, where consumers can check for food recalls and other safety issues."

"The FDA is expected to issue proposed rules relatively soon on the Food Safety Modernization Act. The $1.4 billion bill is aimed at preventing food contamination, allows the FDA to issue mandatory recalls if businesses do not voluntarily recall harmful foods, and requires grocery stores and other food sellers to notify consumers if they have sold food that has been recalled."

 
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Original clinical study reports, which contain far more detail than published randomized trials, should be made available to independent researchers seeking to verify efficacy and safety claims.

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