F is the 6th letter of the alphabet O is the 15the letter of the alphabet 1+5=6 and X is the 24th letter of the alphabet 2+4=6. OMG!!!
http://health.yahoo.net/news/s/nm/us_food_massachusetts
Excerpt:
Massachusetts finds expired food in school cafeterias
http://www.fsis.usda.gov/factsheets/FSIS_Food_Recalls/index.asp
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USDA/FDA video
http://www.ehow.com/video_4398537_usda-fda.html
http://www.fsis.usda.gov/factsheets/importing_meat_poultry_egg_products/index.ASP
Excerpt:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVOUZXef67s http://www.fsis.usda.gov/Help/FAQs_Hotline_Inspection/ Excerpt:
The FDA also enforces other laws, notably Section 361 of the Public Health Service Act and associated regulations, many of which are not directly related to food or drugs. These include sanitation requirements on interstate travel and control of disease on products ranging from certain household pets to sperm donation for assisted reproduction. The FDA is led by the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. The Commissioner reports to the Secretary of Health and Human Services. The 21st and current Commissioner is Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg. She has served as Commissioner since February 2009. The FDA has its headquarters at Silver Spring, Maryland and has 223 field offices and 13 laboratories located throughout the 50 states, the United States Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico.[3] In 2008, the FDA started opening offices in foreign countries, including China, India, Costa Rica, Chile, Belgium, and the United Kingdom.[4]
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http://www.fda.gov/newsevents/newsroom/pressannouncements/ucm223248.htm
Excerpt:
UPDATE: August 20, 2010: Related nationwide recall:
Eggs from Hillandale Farms may put consumers at risk for Salmonella.
Through tracebacks conducted as part of its ongoing investigation into the increase of Salmonella Enteritidis illnesses nationwide, FDA and the State of Minnesota identified Hillandale Farms in Iowa as a second potential source of contaminated shell eggs.
Eggs affected by this latest recall are distributed under the following brand names: Hillandale Farms, Sunny Farms, and Sunny Meadow in 6-egg cartons, dozen-egg cartons, 18-egg cartons, 30-egg package, and 5-dozen cases. Loose eggs are packaged under the following brand names: Wholesome Farms and West Creek in 15 and 30-dozen tray packs. The loose eggs may also be repackaged by customers.Eggs involved in this related recall are only eggs with the following plant numbers:
P1860 – Julian (production) numbers ranging from 099 to 230
P1663 – Julian (production) numbers ranging from 137 to 230
FDA continues to have on-site investigators at Hillandale Farms of Iowa, Inc. and Wright County Egg in Iowa.
http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/h/margaret_a_hamburg/index.html
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm249270.htm
Excerpt:
FDA posts press releases and other notices of recalls and market withdrawals from the firms involved as a service to consumers, the media, and other interested parties. FDA does not endorse either the product or the company.
Frankly Fresh Inc. Voluntarily Recalls Seafood Salad Products Because Of Possible Health Risk
Contact:
mailto:wecare@franklyfresh.com?subject=
1-800-826-3322
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - March 30, 2011 -Frankly Fresh, Inc. of Carson, CA. is voluntarily recalling its seafood line of products, because it has the potential to be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes, an organism which can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems.
Although healthy individuals may suffer only shortterm symptoms such as high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea, Listeria infection can cause miscarriages and stillbirths among pregnant women.Product was distributed in the California and Nevada Areas through retail supermarket stores. Products are packed under the Frankly Fresh label in a variety of sizes in plastic containers with safety seals on.
The affected products / lots are:
http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/h/margaret_a_hamburg/index.html
Excerpt:
Margaret A. Hamburg
Margaret A. Hamburg, a former New York City health commissioner, is the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. She joins the beleaguered agency in the midst of a government decision about whether and how to manufacture a vaccine for swine flu.
Appointed in 1991 to serve as acting health commissioner of New York City, Dr. Hamburg inherited urgent problems, a spare budget and a divided and demoralized staff.
The Food and Drug Administration could have a familiar feel for her. The turnaround that she engineered is exactly what the Obama administration is hoping she will achieve at the drug agency, which is reeling from a host of similar problems.
Dr. Hamburg succeeded Dr. Andrew C. von Eschenbach, who led the beleaguered agency from 2005 until January 2009 and often had to deflect critics who accused the Bush administration of letting politics play too forceful a role in science policy.
Although she lacks deep experience in drug- or food-safety issues, Dr. Hamburg was an infectious-disease researcher and is an expert in bioterrorism and public preparedness, both of which seem keenly relevant. Her leadership in New York won her admirers among public health advocates, many of whom said she would be a good leader to an agency a previous commissioner had likened to a cancer patient.
The F.D.A. regulates more than $1 trillion worth of consumer goods, including a third of all imported goods, items as varied as eggplants, eyeliners, microwave ovens, monoclonal antibodies and cellphones. The figure amounts to about 25 cents of every consumer dollar spent in the United States. The agency is widely thought to need major reforms, particularly to its oversight of food safety. An unusual group of internal whistle-blowers has claimed that the agency's oversight of medical devices is deeply flawed.
Dr. Hamburg, who was appointed by Mayor David N. Dinkins of New York City as acting commissioner in 1991 and became commissioner the next year, was one of the few top officials asked to remain when Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani took office in 1994. She was best known for developing a tuberculosis control program that produced sharp declines in the incidences of the disease in New York. Under her tenure, child immunization rates rose in the city.
When she took office in New York, the city was facing a growing epidemic of drug-resistant tuberculosis during a fiscal crisis. H.I.V. infections, drug abuse and homelessness had caused tuberculosis to come roaring back from dormancy. Solving the problem seemed beyond the powers of the health department, divided and demoralized in the wake of the abrupt departure of her predecessor.
A key problem was that many of those infected failed to take their medicines until cured, leading to the creation of drug-resistant disease strains. Dr. Hamburg pushed for the power to civilly detain tuberculosis patients -- many with mental illnesses or drug addictions -- until they were cured.
She turned her attention to the prison at Rikers Island, where scores of the island's huge jail population were infected with TB. Despite the city's financial problems, Dr. Hamburg got the city to construct on the island in 90 days a top-notch tuberculosis hospital and to screen all inmates for the disease - as many as 125,000 people in a year.
The tuberculosis epidemic subsided.
She left New York in 1997 to become assistant secretary for planning and evaluation at the federal Department of Health and Human Services, where she created a bioterrorism initiative and led planning for pandemic flu response.
In 2001, she joined the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a Washington-based group focused on reducing the public safety threat from chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Dr. Hamburg is the daughter of Dr. David A. Hamburg, a former president of the Institute of Medicine and a longtime force in public health, and Dr. Beatrix Hamburg. She has two teenage children and serves on the boards of Henry Schein, a medical products distributor, and the Sidwell Friends School, where the president's daughters, Malia and Sasha Obama, are students.
Dr. Hamburg, who was appointed by Mayor David N. Dinkins of New York City as acting commissioner in 1991 and became commissioner the next year, was one of the few top officials asked to remain when Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani took office in 1994. She was best known for developing a tuberculosis control program that produced sharp declines in the incidences of the disease in New York. Under her tenure, child immunization rates rose in the city.
When she took office in New York, the city was facing a growing epidemic of drug-resistant tuberculosis during a fiscal crisis. H.I.V. infections, drug abuse and homelessness had caused tuberculosis to come roaring back from dormancy. Solving the problem seemed beyond the powers of the health department, divided and demoralized in the wake of the abrupt departure of her predecessor.
A key problem was that many of those infected failed to take their medicines until cured, leading to the creation of drug-resistant disease strains. Dr. Hamburg pushed for the power to civilly detain tuberculosis patients -- many with mental illnesses or drug addictions -- until they were cured.
She turned her attention to the prison at Rikers Island, where scores of the island's huge jail population were infected with TB. Despite the city's financial problems, Dr. Hamburg got the city to construct on the island in 90 days a top-notch tuberculosis hospital and to screen all inmates for the disease - as many as 125,000 people in a year.
The tuberculosis epidemic subsided.
She left New York in 1997 to become assistant secretary for planning and evaluation at the federal Department of Health and Human Services, where she created a bioterrorism initiative and led planning for pandemic flu response.
In 2001, she joined the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a Washington-based group focused on reducing the public safety threat from chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.
Dr. Hamburg is the daughter of Dr. David A. Hamburg, a former president of the Institute of Medicine and a longtime force in public health, and Dr. Beatrix Hamburg. She has two teenage children and serves on the boards of Henry Schein, a medical products distributor, and the Sidwell Friends School, where the president's daughters, Malia and Sasha Obama, are students.
Highlights From the Archives
New F.D.A. Chief Says She’ll Toughen Enforcement Efforts
Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, the new commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, promised to toughen enforcement and hire new leaders for the agency.
June 17, 2009usNewsARTICLES ABOUT MARGARET A. HAMBURG
Newest First | Oldest First
Egg Industry Faces New Scrutiny After Outbreak
As egg producers reeled from a recall, they were already battling a movement to outlaw their methods as cruel and unsafe.
August 24, 2010 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: FACTORY FARMING, EGGS, CRUELTY TO ANIMALS, CONSUMER PROTECTION, REGULATION AND DEREGULATION OF INDUSTRY, SALMONELLA (BACTERIA), RECALLS AND BANS OF PRODUCTS, POULTRY, FOOD CONTAMINATION AND POISONING, IOWA, HUMANE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED STATES, PEOPLE FOR THE ETHICAL TREATMENT OF ANIMALS, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, HILLANDALE FARMS, WRIGHT COUNTY EGG
Experts, Conflicts and the F.D.A.
The F.D.A. has taken important steps to reduce conflicts of interest among the experts who advise on crucial policy matters.
May 5, 2010 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: EDITORIALS, DRUGS (PHARMACEUTICALS), ETHICS, MEDICINE AND HEALTH, CONFLICTS OF INTEREST, TESTS AND TESTING, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Honest Food Labels
The F.D.A. commissioner’s crackdown on misleading nutritional claims by food companies is a refreshing departure from the Bush-era approach. It’s about time.
March 18, 2010 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: DIET AND NUTRITION, EDITORIALS, CONTAINERS AND PACKAGING, LABELING AND LABELS, CONSUMER PROTECTION, REGULATION AND DEREGULATION OF INDUSTRY, FOOD, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Generics Face Longer Wait for Approval
Caused by a growing backlog of applications, approvals of new generics by the F.D.A. took 26.7 months last year, compared to 16.3 months in 2005.
February 20, 2010 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: GENERIC AND BRAND NAME PRODUCTS, GENERIC BRANDS AND PRODUCTS, DRUGS (PHARMACEUTICALS), PRICES (FARES, FEES AND RATES), CONSUMER PROTECTION, MEDICINE AND HEALTH, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
New F.D.A. Chief Says She’ll Toughen Enforcement Efforts
Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, the new commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, promised to toughen enforcement and hire new leaders for the agency.
June 17, 2009 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: REGULATION AND DEREGULATION OF INDUSTRY, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
F.D.A. Chief Lauds Food Safety Bill as the ‘Right Direction’
Margaret A. Hamburg told a government subcommittee that she supports a safety overhaul but that her agency would need more money to carry it out.
June 4, 2009 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: ANTIBIOTICS, FOOD CONTAMINATION AND POISONING, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Obama’s Choice to Lead F.D.A. Doesn’t Shy Away From Difficult Situations
The Obama administration hoped Margaret A. Hamburg, who turned around New York City’s health care system, could repeat the feat at the Food and Drug Administration.
May 7, 2009 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: APPOINTMENTS AND EXECUTIVE CHANGES, MEDICINE AND HEALTH, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, OBAMA, BARACK
Strong Leadership for the F.D.A.
Dr. Margaret Hamburg and Dr. Joshua Sharfstein have the skills and experience to repair the damaged agency and restore its ability to protect American consumers.
March 17, 2009 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: APPOINTMENTS AND EXECUTIVE CHANGES, EDITORIALS, MEDICINE AND HEALTH, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, SHARFSTEIN, JOSHUA, OBAMA, BARACK
President Promises to Bolster Food Safety
President Obama promised to reorganize the nation’s fractured food-safety system, calling inadequate inspections “a hazard to the public health.”
March 15, 2009 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: APPOINTMENTS AND EXECUTIVE CHANGES, FOOD CONTAMINATION AND POISONING, FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, OBAMA, BARACK, VILSACK, TOM
Virus Alert
Barry Gewen reviews following books: The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History by John M Barry; and Microbial Threats to Health: Emergence, Detection, and Response, edited by Mark S Smolinski, Margaret A Hamburg and Joshua Lederberg; drawing
March 14, 2004 Health Chief Quits to Take Job as Adviser In Washington
Dr Margaret A Hamburg, New York City Health Commissioner, resigns after five years on job to take senior position in Clinton Administration; she will become Asst Sec for Planning and Evaluation in Federal Health and Human Services Dept
March 22, 1997 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: SUSPENSIONS, DISMISSALS AND RESIGNATIONS, APPOINTMENTS AND EXECUTIVE CHANGES, HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT, HEALTH DEPARTMENT, CLINTON, BILL
Researcher's Resentment Over Subpoena From City
New York City's investigation of an outbreak of an intestinal ailment caused by an exotic microbe has created an extraordinary conflict between the Health Department and a leading scientist over reporting cases of the ailment, cyclospora. The city's Health Commissioner, Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, subpoenaed records from the scientist, Dr. Rosemary Soave of New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center. Dr. Soave said in an interview that she had declined an initial request early last month to turn ove...
July 2, 1996 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: CYCLOSPORA (PROTOZOA), RESEARCH, FOOD CONTAMINATION AND POISONING, NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK HOSPITAL-CORNELL MEDICAL CENTER, SOAVE, ROSEMARY
Plans Drawn To Help Fight Poison Attack
Over the last year New York City has stepped up efforts to counter chemical and biological terrorism attacks of the sort that occurred in Tokyo last week, Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, the city Health Commissioner, says. Among the efforts was a daylong drill after a simulated attack involving a bacterium, anthrax.
March 26, 1995 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL WARFARE, SUBWAYS, ANTHRAX, SARIN (NERVE GAS), POISON GASES, BACTERIA, TRANSIT SYSTEMS, TERRORISM, NEW YORK CITY
Giuliani Call For Firings Briefly Defied
In a brief show of defiance, the Health Commissioner, Margaret A. Hamburg, turned up at a City Council hearing yesterday accompanied by her press aide who is one of 35 people that Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani wants dismissed. Dr. Hamburg, one of the few commissioners from the Dinkins administration who were kept on by Mr. Giuliani, testified for several hours at a hearing on a new city agency for control of stray animals. After her testimony, she was asked by a group of reporters if she was suppor...
February 10, 1995 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG AND: SUSPENSIONS, DISMISSALS AND RESIGNATIONS, POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT, GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, NEW YORK CITY, GIULIANI, RUDOLPH W, MATTHEWS, STEVEN J
'The Coming Plague'
To the Editor: As the New York City Health Commissioner, I would like to respond to Stephen S. Hall's perplexing review of "The Coming Plague (Oct. 30), Laurie Garrett's excellent study of the threat posed by new and re-emergent microbial diseases. Mr. Hall accepts the importance of the issues raised by Ms. Garrett, yet he complains about her thoroughness and attention to detail. The matters discussed in "The Coming Plague" are serious and of significant concern, not only to scientists and publ...
November 27, 1994 MORE ON MARGARET A. HAMBURG
http://www.fsis.usda.gov/Fsis_recalls/
Excerpt: