2004 Annual CFS Meeting - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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2004 Annual CFS Meeting

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Work with CDC to attribute pathogens and illnesses to specific foods ... Enhance IT networking for real-time lab communication ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 2004 Annual CFS Meeting


1
U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Food Protection Plan
David W. K. Acheson, M.D., F.R.C.P. Associate
Commissioner for Foods
2
Outline
  • Changes that need to be addressed
  • Food Protection Plan
  • Major elements
  • Legislative proposals
  • Other activities
  • Import Safety Action Plan
  • China MOA
  • Importance of partnering with States

3
Changes and Challenges Trends in Consumption
Demographics
  • Consumer demand for items 24/7, year round
  • Convenience foods are increasing in popularity
  • Spending on foodservice equals half of U.S. food
    spending
  • Consumers are eating more fresh produce
  • 20 - 25 of the population is high risk
  • In 1980 - 15 over age 60
  • In 2025 - 25 will be over age 60
  • 4 of the population is immune-compromise

4
Changes and Challenges Global Food Supply

16.3 MILLION IMPORT LINES

9.1 MILLION FOOD LINES

Estimated
5
Changes and Challenges New Foodborne Pathogens
Since 1977
  • Campylobacter jejuni
  • Cryptosporidium parvum
  • Shiga toxin-producing E. coli
  • Noroviruses
  • Vibrio cholerae O139
  • Vibrio parahaemolyticus
  • Campylobacter fetus
  • Cyclospora cayetanesis
  • Listeria monocytogenes
  • Salmonella Enteritidis
  • Vibrio vulnificus
  • Yersinia enterocolitica
  • Enterobacter sakazakii
  • Salmonella Typhimurium DT104

6
Changes and Challenges Bioterrorism
  • Intelligence indicates terrorists have discussed
    components of the food sector
  • Manuals for intentional contamination of food are
    widely available
  • Food and Agriculture are critical assets and
    concern exists for exploitation of soft targets,
    such as the food supply
  • Use of biological or chemical weapons against our
    food supply could cause mass casualties
  • Even an ineffective attack could cause
    significant economic and psychological damage

7
Changes and Challenges Communication
  • Outdated FDA data handling capacity.
  • Growing imports
  • Need for integrated systems
  • Information to protect consumers difficult to
    deliver.
  • Consumer level
  • Retail level

8
Time for a New Approach
Reactive
Proactive
9
Food Protection Plan
  • In May 2007, the Secretary of HHS and the
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs charged FDA with
    developing a comprehensive, integrated Food
    Protection Plan
  • Food for people and animals
  • Domestic and imported
  • Food safety and food defense

10
The Food Protection Plan
11
Food Protection Cross-Cutting Themes
  • Focus on risks over a Products life cycle
  • Target resources to achieve maximum risk
    reduction
  • Gather the science
  • Rank products based on risk
  • Focus prevention and intervention
  • Integration of food safety and food defense
  • Use science and modern technology systems

12
Food Protection Plan
  • Three core elements
  • Prevention
  • Intervention
  • Response
  • Under each element
  • Key steps
  • FDA actions
  • Legislative proposals
  • Approach
  • 38 FDA Administrative Actions
  • 10 Legislative Proposals

13
PreventionAgency Actions
  • Promote Increased Corporate Responsibility
  • Solicit stakeholder input on Food Protection Plan
  • Issue guidance on developing food protection
    plans and other preventive measures for industry
  • Meet with trading partners to discuss domestic
    efforts on prevention and approaches to improving
    prevention abroad
  • Identify Food Vulnerabilities and Assess Risk
  • Use available tools to evaluate and prioritize
    risk from food and feed agents
  • Work with CDC to attribute pathogens and
    illnesses to specific foods
  • Expand Understanding and Use of Effective
    Mitigation Measures
  • Research plan on mitigation approaches (source,
    spread, prevention) for high-risk foods
  • Research and develop new detection methods

14
PreventionLegislative Proposals
  • Preventive Controls Against Intentional
    Contamination by Terrorists or Criminals at
    Points of High Vulnerability
  • Focus in areas of greatest risk
  • Preventive Controls for High-Risk Foods
  • Foods associated with repeated instances of
    serious illness or death
  • Registration Renewal Every Two Years and
    Modification of Registration Categories
  • Expand available food categories to reflect
    current food types

15
InterventionAgency Actions
  • Increase Risk-Based Inspections and Sampling
  • Increase food and feed safety inspections and
    sampling
  • Identify and implement methods and tools for
    quick and accurate contaminant detection
  • Collaborate with foreign authorities to reduce
    risk of imported food
  • Enhance targeting of imports for inspection based
    on risk
  • Conduct additional foreign food and feed
    inspections
  • Improve the Detection of Food System Signals
    that Indicate Contamination
  • Improve adverse event and consumer complaint
    reporting systems
  • Establish a Reportable Food Registry (FDAAA)
  • Develop a database for veterinarians that
    captures data on food safety incidents (FDAAA)

16
InterventionLegislative Proposals
  • Accredit Third Parties for Food Inspections
  • FDA accreditation program, including audit and
    training
  • Certification could be considered for import
    review and domestic inspection priorities
  • Electronic Import Certificates for Designated
    High Risk Products
  • FDA determines products of concern and criteria
    for certification
  • Shipments without proper certification are
    refused entry
  • Refusal of Admission if Inspection Access Is
    Denied
  • Currently, FDA cannot refuse admission if foreign
    inspections are denied or delayed
  • Provides a level playing field for domestic
    foreign manufacturers

17
ResponseAgency Actions
  • Improve Immediate Response
  • Enhance capabilities of FDAs Emergency
    Operations Network Incident Management System
  • With stakeholders, develop an action plan for
    more effective traceback (process/technologies)
    of contaminated food and feed
  • Enhance IT networking for real-time lab
    communication
  • Improve Risk Communication to the Public,
    Industry, and Other Stakeholders
  • Update Food Protection Risk Communication Plan
    with strategies to effectively communicate with
    consumers
  • In a food emergency, implement Food Protection
    Risk Communication Plan to get appropriate
    information to consumers, retailers, industry,
    healthcare community, public health officials,
    and other stakeholders

18
ResponseLegislative Proposals
  • Mandatory Recall of Food Products
  • Reasonable belief the food is adulterated and
    presents a risk of serious illness or death
  • Used only when firm refuses or delays a voluntary
    recall
  • Enhanced Access to Food Records during
    Emergencies
  • Current access requires reasonable belief that a
    food is adulterated AND presents a risk of
    serious illness or death
  • Would allow access when specific adulterant has
    not been identified
  • Expand access to records for related foods, such
    as food produced on the same production line

19
The Import Safety Plan Import Safety Action Plan
(ISAP)
  • Executive Order 13439 July 2007
  • Involvement of 12 Federal Departments and
    Agencies - Led by HHS Secretary Leavitt
  • Strategic Framework September 2007
  • Risk-Based, Life Cycle Approach
  • Organizing Principles
  • Prevention (with Verification)
  • Intervention
  • Response
  • Action Plan November 2007
  • 14 Broad Recommendations
  • 50 Specific Action Steps
  • Short and Long Term

20
FDA Amendments Act
  • Title X Food Safety
  • Built into FPP
  • Section 1002 Ensuring the Safety of Pet Food
  • Section 1003 Ensuring Efficient and Effective
    Communications During a Recall
  • Section 1004 State and Federal Cooperation
  • Section 1005 Reportable Food Registry
  • Section 1006 Enhance Aquaculture and Seafood
    Inspection (traceability system study)

21
U.S. and ChinaMemorandum of Agreement
(MOA)Agreement on the Safety of Food and Feed
  • Signed December 11, 2007
  • Key points
  • New registration and certification requirements
  • Greater information sharing
  • Increased access to production facilities
  • Implementing and establishing key benchmarks
  • Implementation of agreement will begin with
    designated covered products
  • LACF/AF
  • pet food/treats of animal or plant origin
  • ingredients for food and feed (e.g., wheat
    gluten)
  • all aquaculture farming products except molluscan
    shellfish

22
Public Health Impact of the Food Protection Plan
23
Next Steps
  • Develop an implementation plan
  • Initiate 2008 deliverables
  • Meet with stakeholders
  • Work with Congress on legislative proposals
  • Degree of progress is resource dependent
  • Integrate with China MOA and Import Safety Action
    Plan
  • Recognize that this is a long term activity

24
Partnering with States
  • Addressing some key issues at FDA
  • How to share the BT registration database
  • How to use secure electronic communication during
    recalls
  • Making good use of state data
  • Input from states regarding the FPP
  • Direct call to state associations
  • 50 State meeting

25
Summary
  • Changes in the food supply necessitate a new
    approach to food protection
  • Food Protection Plan is integrated with greater
    emphasis on Prevention, plus effective
    Intervention and rapid Response
  • Coordination of various food-related activities
    within FDA
  • Partnerships are critical to overall success

26
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