Reality of Frozen & Packaged Food Spreading COVID19

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  • There are increasing reports of covid19 cases linked to frozen and packaged foods.
  • 10 in 100s of packaged food tests positive for the virus highlighting the food safety.
  • Indeed there’s no concrete evidence on foodborne nature of the disease, most of it is due to surface transmission.
  • Researchers are categorically saying that the virus can’t cause major disease through surface transmission.
  • However, it is best that manufacturers, shippers, supply chain workers act with utmost caution wearing gloves and masks.
  • The primary reason the virus being found on frozen and packaged food is that freezing makes the virus survive for more time.
  • However, a simple freeze-thawing from refrigeration to transport is enough to dry out and kill the virus.

After reports of the virus being found in imported Brazilian meat products in China, people are becoming more scared of a possible foodborne nature of the pandemic. Although WHO had reiterated that packaged food and food delivery are pandemic safe yet the ground reality seems different. Now, the first country to eliminate the virus, New Zealand has started reporting news cases which are possibly linked to imported food packages, reports the Science Alert.

The country’s health officials suggested the new outbreak may be linked to these frozen goods because one of the infected patients works at a store that orders such items from overseas, Reuters reported on Thursday.

So far, the Shenzhen health commission reported that no one who’s come in contact with the frozen food products tested positive for COVID-19.

People warned of packaged foods

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The municipal health commission in Shenzhen, where officials detected the contaminated chicken-wing packages, warned residents to be “cautious in buying imported frozen meat products and aquatic products in recent days,” according to NBC News.

Infection from frozen food rare

But experts maintain that the chance of catching COVID-19 from frozen food is slim.

“It is possible, but the virus is not very stable outside the human body,” Caitlin Howell, a chemical and biomedical engineer at the University of Maine, told Business Insider.

Freezing extends virus infectivity

She added, “freezing or refrigerating the virus can help to extend the period of time that it stays infectious, which is why we think that outbreaks at meatpacking plants were occurring so frequently, but transmission via surfaces still appears to be rare – even when those surfaces are frozen or refrigerated.”

No evidence of infection from food chain

Chinese health officials have detected coronavirus on frozen packaging before. Frozen seafood packages transported by a foreign ship to Yantai had traces of virus, too, NBC News reported. (The origin of those packages is unknown.) They also found coronavirus on imported frozen foods in Dalian, Xiamen, and Pingxiang last month.

But those findings are not cause for concern, according to Michael Ryan, executive director of the World Health Organisation’s Health Emergencies Program.

“There is no evidence that food or the food chain is participating in transmission of this virus, and people should feel comfortable and feel safe,” Ryan said in a press briefing on Thursday, adding, “people should not fear food, or food packaging or processing, and the delivery of food.”

China has tested a few hundred thousand packaging samples and less than 10 came back positive, the WHO reported.

That’s because the virus – if it winds up on such packages at all – is unlikely to survive for the time it takes to ship goods from one place to another, according to Rachel Graham, an epidemiologist at the University of North Carolina.

How can you kill the virus?

“Even frozen, on a surface like that, you’ll see the virus desiccate and dry out, which renders it completely non-infectious,” Graham told Business Insider, adding that the “freeze-thaw process” could kill it as well.

What’s more, she said, it’s likely that Chinese officials detected viral RNA on the packages, which doesn’t pose a big threat.

“While RNA is virologically infectious, practically it is not,” she said.

How deadly is this?

The coronavirus can persist on surfaces, but it’s unlikely to make you sick

A person can get the coronavirus if they touch a surface or object that has viral particles on it then touch their mouth, nose, or eyes.

The lifespan of the virus on objects depends on the type of material: One study found that it took three hours for the virus to leave tissue and printing paper, while other research suggests viral particles can live up to a day on cardboard and up to three days on plastic and stainless steel.

But the coronavirus typically spreads via airborne droplets (and likely aerosols as well), rather than shared surfaces.

How can they be so sure about surface transmission?

“Throughout the entire pandemic so far, there has continued to be shipping of products all over the world. If transmission via surfaces – whether frozen or refrigerated or not – were a major driver of infection, we would be seeing many case reports on it,” Howell said, adding, “the fact that we’re not suggests that it is not a major route of infection.”

Indeed, the CDC says the virus “does not spread easily” from contaminated surfaces, though the agency continues to recommend that people “routinely clean and disinfect” high-touch surfaces just in case.

Precautions to reduce surface transmission risks

Howell and Graham both recommend that shippers and shoppers stay vigilant and diligent during the pandemic.

“The best thing that can be done by the manufacturers, shippers, and others in the supply chain is to have a strong, enforced policy of wearing masks, washing hands, and staying home when sick,” Howell said.

For individual shoppers, she added, “the best thing for consumers to do is simply to avoid touching their face until they have had a chance to wash their hands or use hand sanitizer.”

Your chance of touching a virus-infected surface in a public store is far, far higher than encountering the virus on frozen food, according to Graham.

“It’s not something you should be concerned about, but you should continue to be aware of what you touch and then bring to your face. That’s going to protect you the most,” she said.

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Source: Science Alert