Who really knows why chickens cross the road? Who really cares? In any case this post is not about poultry making it safely to the other side of the street.
The CDC estimates 48 million people get sick, 128,000 are hospitalized, and
3,000 die from foodborne diseases each year in the United States. Of course that is from all sources, but nearly 2 million people are sickened annually just from poultry contaminated by bacteria (principally salmonella and campylobacter). 28,000 of them end up in the hospital and nearly 500 die, but it is an experience that nobody wants to have. Reducing the incidence of these bacterial illnesses has been a stated national public health goal in the US for over a decade, yet the same number of people get ill from eating contaminated poultry today as in 2010.
Maybe this is at least partly because the US Department of Agriculture, who is responsible for regulating food safety, allows contaminated chicken to go from slaughterhouse to market legally. The USDA, in fact, allows 9.8 percent of the whole chickens it tests to
be contaminated with salmonella. The percentages are even higher for
chicken parts (15.4 percent) and ground chicken (25 percent).
Campylobacter, too, is allowed in poultry—15.7 percent of samples for
whole chickens, 7.7 percent for parts, and 1.9 percent for ground.
As if that is not bad enough, the USDA applies the limit to all bacterial strains in total. "What this means," says Brian Ronholm, director of food policy at Consumer Reports,"is that a manufacturer can meet the USDA's target by reducing strains that rarely make people sick without targeting the strains that tend to cause more severe illnesses."
But wait! No one eats raw poultry, right? Doesn't cooking kill salmonella and other bacteria?
“The short answer is yes, cooking will kill salmonella, but it has to be
the right type of cooking,” says Trevor Craig, corporate director of
technical consulting for Microbac Laboratories. As a general rule of thumb, cook all poultry to an internal temperature
165℉. The only way to ensure that you have hit the right temperature is using a meat thermometer
to check. If you don’t cook your food to a certain temperature you’re not actually going to kill off that bacteria.
It is also very easy to spread the contamination from poultry to other foods by using, say, the same utensils or cutting board to prepare them. Always clean your tools and prep area after working with poultry. Better yet, use different ones.
You can read more about the issue of bacteria contamination here and here.
Enjoy those holiday turkeys!