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LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING @ YOUR DESKTOP Tuesday, May 11, 2010 6:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Eastern time FDA/CFSAN: Food Irradiation Presented by: Dr. Lane Highbarger
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1.Introductions 2.Tech-help info 3.Web Seminar tools 4.Presentation 5.Evaluation 6.Chat with the presenter(s) Agenda:
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Jeff Layman Tech Support NSTA jlayman@nsta.org 703-312-9384 NSTA WS Staff Supporting the Presenting Team is… For additional Tech-help call: Elluminate Support, 1-866-388-8674 (Option 2)
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Elluminate Screenshot
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NSTA WS Staff We would like to know more about you…
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How many NSTA web seminars have you attended? A. 1-3 B. 4-5 C. More than 5 D. More than 10 E. This is my first web seminar Use the letters A-E located at the bottom right of the participant window to answer the poll. Poll #1
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How many NSTA web seminars have you attended? A. 1-3 B. 4-5 C. More than 5 D. More than 10 E. This is my first NSTA web seminar Poll #1
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Where are you now?
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What grade level do you teach? Poll #2 A. Elementary School, K-5. B. Middle School, 6-8. C. High School, 9-12. D. I teach college students. E. I am an Informal Educator.
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LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING @ YOUR DESKTOP Tuesday, May 11, 2010 FDA/CFSAN: Food Irradiation Presented by: Dr. Lane Highbarger
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Food Irradiation Lane A. Highbarger, Ph.D. Division of Biotechnology and GRAS Notice Review Office of Food Additive Safety Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition May 11, 2010
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Poll Question Have you ever knowingly purchased an irradiated food? A) Yes B) No C) How would I know?
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Energy
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Radiation Spectrum
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Sources of Radiation Cobalt 60 - 1.33 MeV Cesium 137 - 662 keV Electron accelerators operated at 10 MeV or less 10 MeV or less X-ray generators operated at 7.5 MeV or less 7.5 MeV or less
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Dose – What it Means Irradiation doses are measured in gray (Gy) –Gy is measured in joule/kg absorbed energy –1 Gy = 1 = 1 m 2 s -2 –For X-rays and gamma rays == Sievert Energy sources are constant Applied dose = energy source ✕ time exposed Absorbed dose depends on other factors J Kg
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Food Irradiation Facilities Gamma Electron beam
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Let’s Pause for Questions?
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Food Irradiation Overview
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A Brief History of Food Irradiation 1905 Begins the era of food irradiation. 1958 Congress defines a source of radiation as a food additive. 1980 Foods irradiated up to 10 kGy considered to be safe and wholesome. 1997 Foods irradiated at any dose should be considered as safe and as wholesome as foods treated by any other conventional process. 2001 Irradiation is used to eliminate possible traces of Anthrax. 1984-2009 FDA approves the use of irradiation in a variety of foods.
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Why Irradiate? Low Dose (<1 kGy) –Control insects –Inhibit maturation –Inhibit sprouting Medium Dose (1-10 kGy) –Extend shelf life –Reduce microorganism level High Dose (> 30 kGy) –Sterilize - analogous to canning –Decontaminate certain food additives, e.g., spices
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Foods Permitted to Be Irradiated Under FDA’s Regulations All foodsArthropod Control 1 kGy max Dry Enzyme Preps.Microbial Control 10 kGy max Fresh Foods Maturation Inhibition 1 kGy max Spices/SeasoningsMicrobial Control 30 kGy max PoultryMicrobial Control 3 kGy max Seeds for sproutingMicrobial Control 8 kGy max Shell eggsMicrobial Control 3 kGy max Meat and meat byproductsMicrobial Control 4 kGy/7 kGy Molluscan shellfish Molluscan shellfishMicrobial Control 5.5 kGy max Fresh lettuce and spinachMicrobial Control 4 kGy max NASASterilization 44 kGy min
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Other Irradiated Substances Medical equipmentMicrobial Control Laboratory animal Microbial Control diets50 kGy max Poultry feedSalmonella spp. 25 kGy max Pet foods, treats andSalmonella spp. chews50 kGy max
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Best return on irradiation Which foods do you think would benefit most from being irradiated? Either from a food safety point of view or a commercial point of view. A) Ground beef B) Lettuce C) Shell eggs D) Fruits E) NASA beefsteak
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Let’s Pause for Questions?
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Irradiation Action
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E-beam – shallow penetration –Converted to x-ray for more penetration Gamma – ‘deeper’ penetration All act via similar mechanisms
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Mammals > Insects > Single Celled Organisms > Viruses; (Prions Likely Resistant) D 10 – The radiation dose needed to inactivate 90% of the microbial load in the food medium
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All bacteria have different susceptibilities to radiation (values in kGy) –Salmonella spp. – 0.36 - 0.77 –Listeria monocytogenes – 0.35 - 0.7 –E. coli O157:H7 – 0.25 - 0.39 A 99.999% reduction = 5 x D 10 value
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Which number sounds better as a descriptor for the reduction of a bacterial population? And which one is the greatest kill? A) 5000 times B) 99.99% C) Reduced by 10 -5 D) A 4 D 10 reduction E) I have a headache now
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Let’s Pause for Questions?
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Safety Considerations
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Radiological Safety Chemical Change and Potential Toxicity Nutritional Adequacy Potential Microbiological Hazard
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Chemical Change Energy stimulates chemistry Increases when liquid is present Initiates reaction with air Generally little – but not necessarily negligible change Can be controlled by controlling conditions
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Heated Lipid (180 ºC/1Hr) vs Irrad (120 kGy)
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Nutrition Issues Vitamins can be labile to heat and irradiation
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Microbiological Radiation sensitivity varies with species Sensitivity varies with environment – –Temperature; water Activity; pH; Salt; etc
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Poll Question Has an explanation about food irradiation made you feel more or less comfortable about purchasing irradiated foods? Do you want more information? MoreYes LesNo
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Let’s Pause for Questions?
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Foods Currently Under Review Crustaceans Multiple-ingredient products Non-refrigerated meat food products Poultry Dietary supplements
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Labeling Criteria The FDA requires that irradiated foods bear the radura label and state on the label “Treated with radiation” or “Treated by irradiation” There is no statutory requirement specific to irradiation
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Poll Quesiton Would you prefer to have food labeled if it were irradiated? Yes X No √ Yes X No
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Controversy and Queries Objections –Consumer –Public Citizen / Center for Food Safety Formal Correspondence
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Let’s Pause for Questions?
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Other non-Thermal Mitigation Technologies
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High Pressure Processing 80k – 130k lb/in 2 Effective at elimination of microbial contamination Spores are resistant Expensive
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Pulsed Field Short bursts of electricity used for microbial control. Liquids, e.g., juice, milk, liquid eggs. Low cost.
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UV Radiation Effective at microbial decontamination in liquids. Approved for use in surface decontamination. Approved for use in juices.
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Web Based Information Resources Food Safety and Irradiation Food Irradiation Processors Alliance – http://www.fipa.us/ http://www.fipa.us/ Kansas State University – http://www.foodsafety.ksu.edu/en/ http://www.foodsafety.ksu.edu/en/ USDA Fact sheet – http://www.fsis.usda.gov/Fact_Sheets/Irradiation_and_Food_Safety/index.asp FSIS on labeling – http://www.fsis.usda.gov/OPPDE/larc/Policies/IrradiationQA.htm http://www.fsis.usda.gov/OPPDE/larc/Policies/IrradiationQA.htm Food Safety dot gov – http://www.foodsafety.gov/ http://www.foodsafety.gov/ Printable information: Irradiated Lettuce and Spinach – http://www.fda.gov/downloads/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/UCM143389.pdf Recent News: E. coli O145 in romaine lettuce – http://www.cdc.gov/ecoli/2010/ecoli_o145/index.htm WSJ Blog on E. Coli – http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2010/05/07/health-blog-qa-what-to-do-about-e-coli/
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Thank you to the sponsor of tonight's Web Seminar:
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http://learningcenter.nsta.org
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http://www.elluminate.com
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National Science Teachers Association Dr. Francis Q. Eberle, Executive Director Zipporah Miller, Associate Executive Director Conferences and Programs Al Byers, Assistant Executive Director e-Learning LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING @ YOUR DESKTOP NSTA Web Seminars Paul Tingler, Director Jeff Layman, Technical Coordinator
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May 12, 2010 Climate Change Here and Now: Forest Ecosystem Impacts May 13, 2010 The McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica: Harshest Place on Earth or a Polar Oasis? May 20, 2010 RAGEing WISSARDs Study Ice Sheets in a Warming World
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Web Seminar Evaluation: Click on the URL located on the Chat Window
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Q and A with the Presenter(s)
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