NYT wrote:A federal effort to ban the sale of raw oysters harvested during the warm months along the Gulf Coast has kicked up a hurricane of opposition from oystermen and members of Congress and threatened to derail a signature food-safety initiative by the Obama administration.
At issue is how far the federal government should go to save the lives of 15 people each year who die from eating contaminated raw oysters. [...]
NYT wrote:Most people can eat raw oysters contaminated with vibrio without problem. Those with compromised immune systems — some of whom do not even know they have health issues — are at gravest risk.
jesteinf wrote:The oyster guy who used to be at Fulton's said that he would never eat a warm water oyster, just too great a chance of getting sick. That being said, I think we should all have the right to decide whether or not to take the risk.
riddlemay wrote:When the government discovered this, they banned the distribution and sale of spinach until they could be reasonably sure that the preponderance of the country's spinach was free of e.coli again.
Mike G wrote:They stopped shipments from certain areas and producers, which resulted in shortages.
But there's no real comparison between a temporary action aimed at remediable QC issues, and deciding that something people have been perfectly okay choosing to do or not do on their own for centuries is now to be stopped, forever.
Mike G wrote:But there's no real comparison between a temporary action aimed at remediable QC issues, and deciding that something people have been perfectly okay choosing to do or not do on their own for centuries is now to be stopped, forever.
JeffB wrote:This is probably just New Englanders and West Coasters trying to hurt the Gulf and Chesapeake guys.
Don't forget the great peanut recall of 2009.JeffB wrote:Peanuts kill 10X that many people. I understand that it's not a perfect analogy because oysters are deadly poison some of the time for most of the people, whereas peanuts are deadly poison all of the time for some of the people. (Of course, given the latter, peanut related deaths should be easier to predict and prevent; the fact that so many deaths happen nonetheless argues for a complete ban, no?)
Mike G wrote:In other words, the informal system worked for 500 years until some expert disagreed with it, and now other experts want to ban it outright to fix the problem that didn't exist until their kind created it.
Michael R. Taylor of the ISSC wrote:The at-risk population includes those with weakened immune systems or otherwise impaired health, including people with chronic diseases such as AIDS, cancer, kidney disease, diabetes, and alcohol abuse.
Reaching members of these high risk groups and persuading them to change their behavior with respect to shellfish consumption or other risk factors has proven extremely difficult, especially because many of the individuals are not even aware that they have a chronic disease. In fact, of the nearly 24 million people with diabetes, almost 6 million are not yet diagnosed. And another 57 million people have pre-diabetes. And when those with liver disease due to heavy drinking need to receive the message, education is that much harder.
It is thus not surprising that education aimed at behavior change has not achieved the 60% reduction in Vibrio cases to which the ISSC has aspired.
Mhays wrote:But, as I have been reminded occasionally since I started trying to work on better school lunches, I'm no expert.
Mhays wrote:I think the point is that there is no significant scientific discovery that warrants this ban; there is no change in the level of danger, or in our understanding of the level of danger...
riddlemay wrote:When we talk "nanny-state," we're usually talking about overzealous interests who want to ban the eating of Big Macs or trans-fats or suchlike. But eating a Big Mac or a bag of fries containing trans-fats won't kill you. (It takes a continuous diet of them to do that, along with other poor lifestyle choices.) This is in contrast to the warm water oysters. One plate of those, if it happens to be the wrong plate, can kill you. The FDA was right to act.
riddlemay wrote: On the second point (no change in our understanding of the danger), I don't think it's quite so clear.
Dmnkly wrote:And you're okay with them making both that valuation and that determination?
riddlemay wrote:Dmnkly wrote:And you're okay with them making both that valuation and that determination?
Your logic is airtight, Dom, but I'll tell you why I'm OK with the FDA making that valuation and determination.
There are many activities that carry risk. But no other food (that I'm aware of) in which simply eating one serving of it can kill you. (Maybe that Japanese blowfish thing, but those aren't legal here, are they? I confess ignorance on this, but I assume they are not.)
riddlemay wrote:Well, maybe I'm just a moldly old liberal, who believes that government actually does have a role to play in protecting the public health, compared to you young(er) whippersnappers and your newfangled libertarian ideas.
Mike G wrote:So you made a deadly choice under the influence of alcohol?
Clearly more laws are needed to protect you.