By: Tufts University
Foodborne illness is a pressing health problem for all consumers, but is a particular concern for seniors.
Did you know that eating a runny egg or a medium-rare hamburger, leaving the leftovers from a restaurant meal in your car for a few hours, or thawing a frozen chicken on your counter, are all potentially risky behaviors? Each of these actions leaves you vulnerable to foodborne illness.
According to the World Health Organization, food safety is growing health concern. Each year, up to 30% of people in industrialized countries alone may fall victim to the ill effects of eating contaminated food.
Older adults are at particular risk. Age-related changes-including decreased immune function that makes it harder to fight infection and digestive changes that allow germs to grow more easily-can add to both the likelihood of developing foodborne illness and the severity of its effects.
Long time cooks commonly protest that they've been preparing foods the same way for years without incident. That may or may not be true. Either they have been lucky, or at some point have self-diagnosed foodborne illness as "the flu." Moreover, the food supply has changed over the years. New, more virulent strains of bacteria threaten more kinds of foods. E. coli bacteria, for instance, has been traced to ground beef, but has also been found on fresh produce and in unpasteurized juice. Salmonella bacteria, once only found on the outside of egg shells, now can potentially contaminate the whole egg, making raw or undercooked eggs unsafe to eat.
Typically, harmful bacteria cannot be smelled, tasted, or otherwise detected. But the consequences, that can include diarrhea, abdominal cramping, fever, nausea, vomiting, headache, and even death, are all too apparent.
Fortunately, there are some steps that both experienced and novice cooks can take to reduce their risk of foodborne illness.
The US Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition recommends that seniors, in particular, avoid the following foods because the level of bacteria present may pose a significant health hazard.