Human Tissue Found in Meats – but eating it is “no threat”
by Amanda Warren
The horse meat fiasco in Europe has prodded
scientists to look a bit deeper into what else we might be consuming. A
team of South African scientists have just found traces of human tissue
in meat meant for public consumption from 9 provinces.
The issue was revealed to parliament, almost as a side note, during meat inspection briefings on Tuesday.A University of Stellenbosch scientist and his team conducted a microbial analysis that revealed traces of human elements, but said that slaughterhouse workers sometimes cut themselves . . . or other things . . . which could lead to the findings.
If I walked into a factory and the sample I randomly selected to test was a meat sample of which the person de-boning the meat had just picked his nose and then touched the meat, I would get a totally different microbial reading,” he said.
Delicious. Beyond the findings themselves,
it brings up the global hot-button topic of the moment: food labeling.
How much should we know about what we are consuming?
In addition to the troubling
statements above, scientist Louw Hoffman noted that only 15% of the meat
being sold in South Africa is correctly labeled, revealing other
potentially harmful attributes of which consumers are currently unaware:
“In the labelling regulations it clearly states that allergens have to be mentioned and noted,” said Hoffman.
Allergens like . . . other people’s genetic signature?
Yet, Hoffman and his team of scientists concluded that the incorrect
labeling poses “no threat” to the consumers who eat it, despite some
more gems uncovered:
Meat Musical Chairs
Briefing parliament’s portfolio committee on agriculture, forestry and fisheries, University of Western Cape forensic scientist Dr Eugenia D’Amato said nearly 43% of samples she had tested which were labelled as game, were, in fact, beef.
D’Amato said horse meat had also been used as a substitute for springbok in biltong, and pork was found in ostrich sausages.
There was also a smaller proportion of kangaroo in samples.
Despite the overall findings that consumers
have absolutely no idea what they are eating – including human remnants
– in 85% of the products, SA’s Department of Agriculture, Forestry and
Fisheries deputy director-general downplayed it by asserting that we are
not becoming unwitting cannibals:
It is possible that (if tested) we could find traces of human DNA in meat. However, even if we do find human DNA, it does not mean we are eating human flesh.
Great. Unfortunately, we are evidently
eliminating healthy microorganisms in the processing of foods, but since
there is an acceptable standard of nasty foreign entities, thanks to
our regulatory agencies – we have introduced a variety of contaminants
into now weakened guts and immune systems.
We’d like to think that these food scandals are safe from us –
overseas, it’s their problem. But, big problems are usually systemic and
many of the developed nations are on the same platform. As with most
food scandals, they go on for years unnoticed before the beans are
spilled.It doesn’t sound like anyone’s literally being run through the meat grinder just yet, but it’s a startling fact that we don’t know much about what our food comes into contact with. And we have scientists and regulatory agencies continually asserting how safe our food supply is.
Are you unsettled at the prospect of ingesting someone else’s particles and blood? Do you wonder what else will be found when the next scientific investigation is conducted in your country?
Perhaps we should be asking ourselves before each meal, “Hey, who’s in there? How’d they get in there? Anyone missing?”
Sources:
http://www.timeslive.co.za/thetimes/2013/03/27/human-tissue-in-my-beef-stew
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/387383/Could-HUMAN-DNA-be-in-our-food-Quite-likely-claim-experts
http://www.bizcommunity.com/Article/196/525/91240.html
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