FDA Takes Too Long To Recall Tainted Food, Federal Investigators Say
Contaminated food is taking too long to be removed from store shelves, according to a report issued by the inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services.
The report says the Food and Drug Administration "did not always have an efficient and effective food-recall process that ensured the safety of the nation's food supply."
Federal investigators reviewed 30 of 1,557 food recalls between 2012 and 2015.
The investigation shows food companies took an average of 57 days to recall items after the FDA was informed of the potential danger.
George Nedder, an assistant regional inspector general at Health and Human Services, was the lead author of the report.
Every year about 130,000 people in the U.S. are hospitalized with a food-borne illness, and 3,000 people die.
FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb agreed that the investigation raised some significant concerns:
The FDA has jurisdiction over most of the U.S. food supply. Meat and poultry are handled by the Department of Agriculture.
NPR's Allison Aubrey reported in September on another report critical of the FDA:
In 2011, President Barack Obama signed into law the Food Safety Modernization Act, which gave the agency the authority to issue a mandatory recall when a company fails to voluntarily recall unsafe food after being asked to do so.
The inspector general's office said the review was conducted "to determine whether FDA is fulfilling its responsibility in safeguarding the nation's food supply now that it has mandatory recall authority."
The reports show the FDA has used its recall authority twice.
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