Year-round consumption of leafy greens increases disease risk

Published 7 September 2007

Desiring healthier food, more Americans and European now eat leafy greens year round; trouble is, the need to supply these vegetables year-round has required new methods to clean, package, and deliver these fragile food items across large distances, creating more opportunities for contamination and infection

More people eat more leafy green year-round, which is a good thing — but which is also risky. Sientists say that the rise in year-round consumption of fresh leafy greens such as lettuce and baby spinach is increasing the difficulty of keeping produce free from contamination by food poisoning bacteria. “The only land suitable for supplying this abundance of year-round, high quality, fresh leafy vegetables, which are eaten raw by large populations in Europe and the United States, is in special geographic regions, with ideal soil and climate conditions”, says Robert Mandrell from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Research Service in Albany, California. ScienceDaily writes that this move to the year-round supply of leafy vegetables has required new methods to clean, package, and deliver rapidly these fragile food items across large distances to consumers in many parts of the world. These include harvesting mowers for some leafy greens, processing in water flumes and triple washing, and modified atmosphere packaging for extended shelf-life. Recent food scares and food poisoning outbreaks have led to intensive investigations of farms and ranches. These have shown that at least some food poisoning bacteria outbreaks have been due to field contamination before the greens are even harvested. “This situation complicates strategies for eliminating illnesses and outbreaks due to the complex ecosystem of multiple potential sources, such as water, wildlife, and nearby livestock, all of which could be sources of bacteria causing food poisoning”, says Mandrell.

Following outbreaks caused by E. coli in leafy vegetables and Salmonella in tomatoes, the U.S. fresh produce industry and federal and state agencies are trying to address the microbial food safety of leafy greens and other vegetables. Major U.S. produce industry associations have worked together to establish a marketing agreement, a set of food safety guidelines (metrics) for growers to produce and harvest leafy greens, and have increased funding for research. It is probably the case that a convergence of unusual events is required for very large outbreaks to occur, a factor everyone is hoping will not affect 2007 harvests. Logical theories about preharvest contamination provide points for study, but no definitive conclusions about the most recent outbreaks can be provided. Fresh, minimally processed leafy greens are here to stay, if the industry continues to work hard to re-establish consumer confidence.