The Trouble With Chicken
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Every year, Salmonella causes more hospitalizations and deaths than any other foodborne illness, with about one in four pieces of raw chicken contaminated with Salmonella today. Why isn't the U.S. food safety system stopping the threat? Correspondent David E. Hoffman investigates how and why the standards and laws around Salmonella have failed to keep up with the increasing danger posed by some strains of the bacteria. The film looks closely at the largest Salmonella poultry outbreak in history, when more than 600 people were sickened over 16 months. Delving into the complex world of food safety, through interviews with local and national public health officials, as well as victims and a top-level poultry industry executive, the film reveals the discrepancies that exist when it comes to foodborne bacteria-contrasting how regulators cracked down hard on E. coli 0157 in raw beef and banned it outright after a deadly outbreak at Jack-in-the-Box two decades ago, but have not taken such decisive action with dangerous kinds of Salmonella, leaving consumers to protect themselves
Discovery of Salmonella Heidelberg (3:23)
Contaminated Poultry (1:35)
Positive Chicken (2:52)
Supplier Pattern (2:32)
Federal Intervention (2:02)
Fast Food Disaster (2:36)
It's the Consumers' Problem (1:47)
Outdated Inspection Regulations (3:14)
Salmonella Performance Standards (2:11)
Salmonella Heidelberg Resurfaces (3:46)
Noah Craten (3:10)
Ignoring Chicken Parts (2:36)
In Search of Evidence (3:55)
Ineffective FSIS Regulations (2:56)
Letters of Deficiency (3:07)
Lack of Federal Action (3:43)
Consumer Burden (2:59)
Limited Responsibility (2:17)
Credits: The Trouble with Chicken (2:05)
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PUBLISHED
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Format: Streaming Video
SUBJECTS
Chicken industry
Health aspects
Congresses
Meat
Contamination
Salmonella infections in poultry
Prevention
Congresses