News Feed
|
|
RSS Feed |
|
If you want have last news about
e. coli infections could be reduced with probiotics, show non-human studies
in your rss reader , you can use this link . |
|
|
|
|
| |
 |
eu ag ministers hold emergency e.coli summit as outbreak source remains mystery
|
|
|
europe’s agriculture ministers are to hold an emergency meeting today on the e.coli outbreak as authorities continue their efforts to pinpoint the source of the bacteria that has killed 22 and sickened almost 2,300 people. the summit comes after german officials yesterday confirmed that preliminary tests on beansprouts from a farm in northern germany had failed to find traces of the new e.coli 0104 bacteria at the heart of the fatal food scare. the analyses were carried out on the beansprouts from the farm in uelzan region, 70km south of hamburg, after gert lindemann, agriculture minister for lower saxony, declared there was a clear link between the vegetables and the bacteria strain. pressure building test results are awaited today on a further 17 batches of the beansprouts seized from the farm. if these are also negative, then it appears that officials will be no nearer finding the source of the outbreak. pressure is building on the european commission and german authorities as the political and economic temperature continues to rise in the wake of attempts to bring the crisis under control. eu health commissioner john dalli insisted that the outbreak remains centred in the region around hamburg in northern germany and dismissed calls for the introduction of europe-wide e.coli controls. efforts to identify the source remain a priority and he revealed yesterday that experts from the commission, the european food safety authority (efsa) and the european center for disease control (ecdc) were all in berlin to assist german scientists in their quest. rasff system under scrutiny hungary, which currently holds the commission presidency, indicated that the eu’s food safety notification system – the rapid alert system for food and feed (rasff) – could come under scrutiny once the current outbreak had been contained. speaking after a meeting of eu health ministers, miklós rethelyi, hungarian minister for national resources, said: “ once the epidemic is under controlwe will have to answer whether the alert and rapid systems worked well.” he said it would be important to see if anything should have been done better, whether lessons could be learnt and what could be done to improve co-ordination. “several serious questions will have to be addressed and answers found,” he added. “this will be the job of the agriculture ministers.” dalli insisted that the eu's rapid alert system had worked, although he conceded "we need to learn lessons as we go along". in the european parliament, uk lib dem mep george lyon called for an independent investigation to find out what had gone wrong, while austrian centre right mep elizabeth koestinger, said the eu must introduce better food labelling to show the origin and provide traceability throughout the food chain. agriculture meeting the agriculture summit today is also expected to begin hammering out financial aid measures for fruit and vegetable growers. "i'm not sure that we will actually have a legal proposal on the table tomorrow ... i think our hope is that we can reach an agreement in principle," said the commission's agriculture spokesman roger waite. spain is currently threatening to take legal action against germany over the naming of its cucumbers as the e.coli source last week.
Source :foodqualitynews.com
Date :
7
June
2011
Category :
Food And Health
|
|
european farmers federation copa-cogeca has supported mep’s calls for greater funds to support producers following the e. coli outbreak in europe.the federation on tuesday (21 june) welcomed mep calls to increase funds for eu fruit and vegetable producers hit by the e. coli crisis under the proposed eu compensation package and called for the commission and farm minsters to act quickly. the announcement follows a debate in the european parliament’s agriculture committee.
|
|
|
the term “proven,” leads a list of 10 emerging trends that will influence new product activity in the nutrition and functional foods sectors this year, according to innova market insights. renewed interest in fruit and vegetables was identified as an emerging trend. \"proven\" is the new buzzword,” it claims because “the few european companies that have successfully navigated the efsa health claims maze will be keen to highlight their ingredients.
|
|
|
a difficult funding climate resulted in more licensing and joint venture transactions than outright acquisitions in the health and nutrition sector in 2009, according to a new report focusing on m&a trends in the industry. the latest report on m&a activity in the health and nutrition sector from the us-based consultants, the jh chapman group, claims that a substantial increase in licensing and joint ventures from 21 in 2008 to 53 in 2009 is reflective of on-going interest for growth via unique technology and knowhow and lack of access to financing.
|
|
|
half-portions of fruit and vegetables in processed and other composite foods will count towards the target of ‘five-a-day’ under a new uk industry scheme. members of the uk food industry, including coca-cola, greencore, heinz, innocent, pepsico, and united biscuits, in addition to the british nutrition foundation, the food and drink federation, together with supermarkets wm morrison, marks and spencer, and tesco, agreed to the new guidelines which aim to help consumers increase their intake of fruit and vegetables.
|
|
|
the notion of going green, buying organic, and sourcing free trade products is gathering momentum in australia and around the world, but research released in australia suggests the added expense remains a significant deterrent. business information analysts ibisworld decided to test the theory that sustainable grocery shopping was too expensive, revealing that, while the ‘organic’ food shopping basket was 70% more expensive, there are a host of cost-effective ‘green’ options.
|
|
|
new standards for food in schools is driving innovation in lunchbox-friendly products as parents heed official messages about healthy eating, according to the latest research from mintel. products that offer convenience, that can be eaten on-the-go and fit the all-natural category are offering opportunities for development for lunchbox food and drink players, said the report called “children's packed lunches - uk - december 2008”.
|
|
|
Coca.Cola
|
PEPSI
|
Mcdonald
|
Nestle
|
Mars
|
Baskin & Robins
|
Nutrika
|
Mumika
|
Chika
|
|