On May 1, 2012, the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) removed all Korean certified shippers of
molluscan shellfish (oysters, clams, mussels, and scallops) from the Interstate
Certified Shellfish Shippers List (ICSSL), following a comprehensive FDA evaluation
that determined that the Korean Shellfish Sanitation Program (KSSP) no longer
meets the sanitation controls spelled out under the National Shellfish
Sanitation Program. FDA’s evaluation of the KSSP found significant
shellfish growing area deficiencies including:
- ineffective management of land-based pollution sources that can impact shellfish growing areas;
- inadequate sanitary controls to prevent the discharge of human fecal waste from fish farms and commercial fishing and aquaculture vessels operating in and adjacent to shellfish growing areas; and
- detection of norovirus in shellfish growing areas analyzed by FDA during the evaluation
The removal of Korean
shellfish shippers from the ICSSL is intended to stop the import of molluscan
shellfish harvested from polluted waters. Korean molluscan shellfish that
entered the United States prior to May 1 and any product made with Korean
molluscan shellfish are considered adulterated under the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act.
FDA recommends that
food distributors, retailers, and food service operators remove from sale or
service, all fresh, frozen, and processed (including canned) Korean molluscan
shellfish and any product subsequently made with them. Korean molluscan
shellfish represents only a small fraction of the oysters, clams, mussels, and
scallops sold in the United States. FDA is currently working to determine
the distribution of the product.
Distributors,
retailers, and food service operators can continue to receive molluscan
shellfish from any of the other shellfish shippers listed in the ICSSL.
Fuente: FDA
Aporte: Angélica Díaz
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