US | food safety US Food Safety Not Improving: Feds CDC shows plateau in food sickenings over the last three years By Nick McMaster Posted Apr 9, 2009 4:02 PM CDT Copied Georgia State Senator John Bulloch, R-Ochlocknee, holds up a jar of peanut butter during a legislative session in the senate chamber Thursday Jan. 29, 2009, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Amis) The safety of the US food supply from disease or contamination has not significantly improved in recent years, the New York Times reports today. A survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that occurrences of major illnesses from tainted food have held steady for the past 3 years, with a statistically insignificant rise in salmonella infections. The plateau means the US is not on track to meet goals set in 2000 as part of the government’s “Healthy People 2010” program, which sought to halve salmonella infections. The CDC says the report shows an urgent need to overhaul the food-safety system, but others say the nation has already made many of the most important improvements. “You can only tell people so much to wash their cutting boards and wash their hands,” said one epidemiologist. Read These Next President Trump threatens to sue Trevor Noah next. Why Catherine O'Hara's death feels like a 'gut punch.' New batch of Epstein files contains more eyebrow-raising claims. Foul play investigated in disappearance of Savannah Guthrie's mom. Report an error