Saturday, October 12, 2013

What Happens to Food Safety During the Shutdown???

Food and Drug Administration (FDA) – FDA would continue limited activities related to
its user fee funded programs including the activities in the Center for Tobacco Products.
FDA would also continue select vital activities including maintaining critical consumer
protection to handle emergencies, high-risk recalls, civil and criminal investigations,
import entry review, and other critical public health issues.

- FDA will be unable to support the majority of its food safety, nutrition, and
cosmetics activities. FDA will also have to cease safety activities such as routine
establishment inspections, some compliance and enforcement activities, monitoring of
imports, notification programs (e.g., food contact substances, infant formula), and the
majority of the laboratory research necessary to inform public health decision-making

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) – CDC will continue minimal support
to protect the health and well-being of US citizens here and abroad through a
significantly reduced capacity to respond to outbreak investigations, processing of
laboratory samples, and maintaining the agency’s 24/7 emergency operations center.
CDC would also continue activities supported through mandatory funding including the
World Trade Center health program, U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief
(PEPFAR), CDC’s Global AIDS program, the Energy Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act (EEOICPA), Vaccines for Children (VFC) program, and certain
childhood obesity activities and asbestos exposure in Libby, Montana.
CDC would be unable to support the annual seasonal influenza program, outbreak
detection and linking across state boundaries using genetic and molecular analysis,
continuous updating of disease treatment and prevention recommendations (e.g., HIV,
TB, STDs, hepatitis), and technical assistance, analysis, and support to state and local
partners for infectious disease surveillance.

Basically the government will take care of obvious safety problems such as the Foster Farms problem but they can’t go out looking for problems that are less obvious.

No comments:

Post a Comment