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The Rural Voice, 1998-03, Page 21Pigs, pork and public perception The indt tstry, must pay heed to concerns of the public, speakers at Centralia Swine Update say By Keith Roulston Concern for food safety is an issue that is being pushed back from consumers through food processors right to food producers and is leading to more calls for quality control in all aspects of food production, Dr. Douglas Powell, of the University of Guelph's Department of Food Sciences told producers at the annual Centralia Swine Research Update in Kirkton, January 28. In the U.S., 9,000 people die each year because of foodborne illnesses. The best guess is that 20 million people get sick each year from food. In Canada, 2.2 million people get sick from food infections. Combine that with the fact aging baby boomers are worried about dict and food and Consumers are becoming increasingly worried about the food they eat. Dr. Douglas Powell says and want accountability right back to the farm level. it's an issue that is creating a trend toward scrutiny of the system all the way back to the farm. Consumers are asking questions of food -producing practices, things such as: "Do I have control?"; "Do I have any benefit?"; "Do I trust the producers?". "Consumers don't want a risk-free world. They make risk/benefit decisions every day. What they do want to know is that those in charge are doing everything they can to manage/mitigate/reduce levels of risk," Powell said. Quality control programs like HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points) involve the procedure to "say what you do, do what you say, and prove it" Powell said. Food issues began to grab headlines with the outbreak of E. coli 0157:H7 (hamburger disease) at the Jack-in-the-Box restaurant chain in Washington State in 1993. Eventually four children died, 700 became sick. Since then there have been other headline -grabbing food issues such as a hamburger disease infection at Hudson Foods where tons of hamburger had to be recalled; mad cow disease; concerns about BST use in dairy cattle; E. coli outbreaks in unpasteurized apple juice and even in vegetables (9500 people in Japan became ill, probably from E. coli in radish sprouts). MARCH 1998 17