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Review of Chernobyl controls

An article on the front page of the Metro this morning called for restrictions to be lifted on the few farms still affected by the nuclear accident at the Chernobyl power plant. This issue has...

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Food safety – everyone’s talking about it

Obviously, staff here at the Agency have been much focused on the E.coli outbreak in Germany over the past fortnight. But it serves to remind us yet again of the importance of good food hygiene...

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Is there a clue in the code?

When investigating food poisoning outbreaks every avenue is worth following in order to build a detailed knowledge base, and gain insights into its source. There are dozens of scientists, from...

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Treating chickens

With the success of the national control plan for salmonella in chickens, it’s interesting to see research still being published that may help reduce infection further. For example, a short piece in...

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Small pond, same big issues...

It looks like the US faces the same problem as us – their media appear intent on promoting scary headlines and shy away from good news stories that could allay consumer fears.  In his blog, Trevor...

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Back to the future

Climate change, flooding, droughts, energy price rises, a squeeze on the economy could all have consequences on food safety. But how and when?A recent study provides one example: it found that the...

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The Archers: never past its sell by date

It sounds like the recent E.coli outbreak in the Archers hasn’t just affected their ice cream – sales of all the farm’s produce has dropped off. It just goes to show ‘bad food hygiene is bad for...

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We can beat the bugs

Our recently published study on infectious intestinal disease (IID) unearthed some worrying statistics. The research found that almost 17 million people suffer from episodes of vomiting, diarrhoea, or...

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Now wash your hands!

A woman coughs on a flight from Hong Kong. The next thing you know, a lethal unknown virus is shooting round the globe and scientists from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are racing...

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Are ‘sell by’ dates headed for the bin?

Sometimes I feel like a broken record trying to defend the importance of sticking to the humble ‘use by’ date and, conversely, reassuring people they won’t drop dead from eating a can of beans that’s...

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Balancing the risks

Judging by its press release it seems we’ve upset the National Farmers’ Union. The Agency’s Board decided not to support relaxing the ban on processed animal proteins (PAP) in feed, and the NFU is...

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Come and join the debate

We love a good robust debate here at the FSA and few subjects bring out the ‘robustness’ of people’s views like a discussion on GM crops. So to ensure that a range of views get an airing our latest...

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Think you know how to wash your hands?

A new study publicised today shows that it’s not only our hands that are dirtier than they should be, but also the everyday things we touch and use regularly, like our mobile phones.We’re talking...

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No room for a slip up in science

The idea of using bananas as a measure of radiation is all a bit much to get my head around on a Monday afternoon, but this BBC article makes for an interesting if not mind-boggling read. Did you know...

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Science is key to building trust, but it's not an absolute

Last week, I was fortunate to be asked to speak at the European Food Safety Authority about independence and scientific decision-making – and how we’ve used this to build trust in food safety in the...

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What's green, furry and horrible?

“Today I’m a few spots on your Cheddar, but tomorrow your whole kitchen will be full of fur. You will only escape by burning the house down”. What is it Phil Daoust was describing, with Halloween-esque...

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Is a problem shared a problem halved?

I’m not sure whether to be reassured or despondent at the results of the Republic of Ireland's latest campylobacter in chicken survey. The results show 84% of shop bought chicken is contaminated with...

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Brazilian football legend is victim of food poisoning

I woke up this morning to hear that one of my great footballing heroes, Socrates, has died aged just 57 years. Socrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira, to give him his full name, was...

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Recipes for disaster

How do you feel about the idea of going home this evening and cooking a lovely seared chicken breast – lightly cooked so it’s pink and bloody in the middle? Not tempted? I should hope not! We know a...

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Let's make a risk-based resolution

'What a weak barrier is truth when it stands in the way of any hypothesis'.Mary Wollstonecraft I came across this quotation in my Christmas reading and it seems as apt now as it was in the 1790s. It...

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Breaking out

Across the pond, cantaloupes, pine nuts, romaine lettuce and sprouts caused serious outbreaks of illness in 2011, according to a recent report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in...

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Back to the freezer

The news this morning that Sainsbury’s, in partnership with Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP), want food relabelled so that it can be frozen up until its 'use by' date, not just on the day of...

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Don't make light of listeria

For most of us, a bout of food poisoning – though extremely unpleasant – is inconvenient rather than life threatening. But those with suppressed immune systems, whether due to illness, chronic disease,...

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Don't economise on food safety

The topic of rising food prices seems to have been in the headlines almost daily for the past few years, but the recent change in tone shows that these increases are now hitting the consumer. Today’s...

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They're always best served washed

After reading that the chances of James Bond dodging the 4,662 bullets fired at him during his film career and surviving is a miniscule 0.954662 I came to the conclusion that the storylines might not...

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Higher, faster – and into the unknown

If you feel that this blog has been notable by its absence over the past few weeks, you would be correct. Like millions of other citizens I’ve been devoting my spare time to the study of aero-dynamics,...

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Science – it’s a 'can-do' profession

Did you know that tin cans have now been used to store and preserve foods for 200 years? It’s the application of science at its best, I would say.It seems that the first cans (short for tinplated...

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Nutty labelling

You may have seen stories in the media recently about bags of monkey nuts being withdrawn from sale because they were not labelled as peanuts. It may seem obvious that monkey nuts contain nuts, as some...

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Digestible facts about radiation

There are 27 nuclear sites situated at various points around the UK. Inevitably, as with any industrial process, they produce waste that enters the environment and may find its way into our food. But...

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Food safety: it’s more than child’s play

Have you ever learned something new while helping your children with homework or with a school project? I’m not embarrassed to admit that in the past I have. This is one of the reasons why teaching...

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