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FDA Investigates Untested Chinese Seafood
William Nathan Smith of San Jose, Calif., talks to reporters Wednesday, May 30, 2012 after being released early from the Josephine County Jail in Grants Pass, Ore. He was among 39 released all at once due to layoffs of guards forced by the failure of a tax increase. Smith said he served 30 days of a 50-day sentence for drugs, a minor assault and being a felon in possession of a firearm and will finish his sentence on a work crew. He said he plans to ``get a job and do the right thing'' now that he is out. (AP Photo/Jeff Barnard) (Jeff Barnard)
Agency officials said that while they believe the shipments were screened correctly, they wanted more details. That review comes in response to findings The Associated Press published Tuesday that at least 1 million pounds of frozen shrimp, catfish or eel raised in Chinese ponds were on an agency watch list but were not diverted to a lab.
The 28 shipments the AP identified arrived under an FDA "import alert," which is supposed to trigger the tough screening requirement.
The seafood, equal to the amount 66,000 Americans eat in a year, did not pose an immediate public health risk; the FDA has worried that long-term exposure to substances fed to some Chinese seafood could increase the risk of cancer or make antibiotics less potent.
A leading Democrat in the House of Representatives said the AP's report raises serious questions about FDA's inspection system and his committee's investigators want the FDA to explain what percentage of all import alert shipments from China — not just seafood — are being stopped and tested.
"The discovery that suspect seafood from China has reached dining room tables in America without being tested is disturbing," said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., whose Energy and Commerce Committee has been investigating the FDA's imported-food safety record. "Apparently, the 'import alert' system used by the FDA to test high risk foods cannot be trusted."
The agency said it has about 450 budgeted positions for screening all the imports it oversees — approximately 20 million shipments of everything from fish to vegetables to pharmaceuticals. Funding for inspectors has not kept pace with the surge in imports over the past decade and FDA employees have told Dingell's committee they're too stretched to guarantee food safety.
For its investigation, the AP reviewed 4,300 seafood shipments from China and found 211 that arrived under import alert between October and May. It was during that period the FDA was putting specific Chinese companies with seafood that had flunked lab tests on its watch list, leading up to a June announcement that all farm-raised shrimp, catfish and eel had to be inspected.
The AP was able to reach importers that brought in 112 of the shipments. They said that 28 of the 112 shipments had not been detained and tested.
The FDA did not verify the AP's numbers.
Agency officials said their initial research showed that from an AP-provided list of more than 200 shipments that arrived under an import alert, 19 were flagged by FDA's computer system and reviewed by a person who determined they didn't need to be tested. Agency officials said they needed to talk to local offices that processed the cargo to find out why those shipments, as well as four others, were allowed through.
The AP gave the FDA its list weeks before publication; the agency did not comment on the specific shipments until after Tuesday's story ran.
"What we're saying is that based on the electronic 30,000-foot view, we can't determine why they were released and we're going to look into those further," said Michael Chappell, the official responsible for field inspections and labs.
"There is no evidence to say they were released ... incorrectly," said Domenic Veneziano, who oversees FDA's import operations.
The agency would not provide details on the total 23 shipments without a Freedom of Information Act request.
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