7 Grocery Items Most Likely to Cause Food Poisoning, According to FDA Data - 24/7 Wall St.

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Each year, about 48 million people get sick from foodborne bacteria and viruses, leading to nearly 130,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths, according to Consumer Reports. Although many recover on their own, certain demographics – including people with compromised immune systems, the elderly, children under 5, and those who are pregnant – are at greater risk of falling seriously ill due to food poisoning. (These are 25 foods that can make you sick or kill you.)

To compile a list of foods most often linked to food poisoning, 24/7 Tempo reviewed a report by Consumer Reports in which food safety experts looked at food recalls and foodborne disease outbreaks from 2017 through 2022. Data came from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Department of Agriculture. Foods that were recalled because of allergens or extraneous materials like the plastic were excluded. Information on symptoms and potential dangers of various kinds of food poisoning came from the CDC and the Mayo Clinic. 

The pathogens that most commonly cause food poisoning – listeria, salmonella, and E. coli – can be killed when food is properly cooked. Accordingly, some of the most common vectors for illness are raw or processed foods that are typically eaten without heating, including salad greens, certain fruits, and deli products. Other vectors include poultry and meat that consumers may not cook to a safe internal temperature.

Click here to see the 7 grocery items most likely to cause food poisoning, according to FDA data

Much of the salmonella or E. coli contamination on produce, including field-grown lettuce, onions, peaches, and melons, as well as wheat that is then milled into flour, can be traced to nearby animal feedlots. Irrigation water may become contaminated with pathogens from cattle or poultry manure, as well as from wild animal droppings. Pathogens can also travel on the wind and contaminate crops.

Listeria, on the other hand, thrives in cool, damp environments and lives on processing equipment, not only in production facilities, but also in refrigerators and on cutting boards and meat-slicing machines. Some of the largest listeria-based recalls in 2021 were of salad mixes, which are processed at only a few production facilities across the U.S., where one contaminated batch of greens can spread listeria to hundreds of other products. (These are 20 major food recalls you should know about.)

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