5
ways to avoid getting sick at the supermarket Published April 20, 2016.
You
can buy all the protein and produce you want, but if you don't handle it the
right way at the supermarket, the healthiest food can still make you sick.
Follow these smart safety strategies to protect your groceries as soon as you
pick them up to the moment you store them in your fridge. 1. Double-Bag
Your Meat The meat section in the supermarket may look sterile. But a Tennessee
State University study says about 50 percent of poultry packages contain
bacteria-including diarrhea-causing coliform and E. coli-on the outside. Plop
one of those packages in your cart, and you could spread the bugs to your other
groceries. Before reaching into the cooler to grab chicken breasts, stick your
hand in a plastic produce bag, pick up the meat, and drop it in another empty
produce bag. "When you use a bag, the risk of cross-contamination goes
down to zero," said study author Sandria Godwin, Ph.D., R.D., L.D.M. 2.
Wipe and Wait Researchers at the University of Arizona find that 72 percent of
shopping carts contain illness-inducing bacteria like E. coli. The bugs
come from other shoppers who may have already had germs on their hands, or
picked them up after touching contaminated food products. Before you grab a
cart, take an antibacterial wipe at the front of the supermarket. Swipe a wipe
over the cart's handle and wait 20 seconds for it to completely air dry. This
will knock out as much bacteria as possible, says Goodwin. "Touching the
handle when it's still wet can just smear the bacteria around or transfer them
to your hands," she says. 3. Pick This Produce Grab the greens located at
the front of the produce display case. Spinach is exposed to more fluorescent
light up front than in the back, reports a study in the Journal of Agriculture
and Food Chemistry . Research shows spinach that's exposed to artificial
lighting stays fresher longer and produces up to 100 percent higher levels of
nutrients including vitamins A, C, E, K, and folate. 4. Clean Reusable
Bags You're helping the environment by using BYO bags. Now do your stomach a
solid by washing them, too. Bacteria that may have hitched a ride from meat or
produce can transfer to your bag and survive for more than 4 months, says
Godwin. Half of all reusable bags contain nasty bacteria that can lead to
diarrhea and vomiting, say University of Arizona researchers. But 97 percent of
people never clean their bags. Throw your bags in a hot wash with bleach
between shopping trips. 5. Skip the Cold Cuts Purdue University researchers find
that 1 in 10 samples taken from deli foods and surfaces-such as the retail
machines used to slice meat and cheese-contain the bacteria Listeria
monocytogenes . Listeria infections can cause flu-like symptoms like headache,
stiff neck, fever, and meningitis. Listeria may also lead to miscarriages,
stillbirths, and premature births in pregnant women. "Between the open
packages, knives, workers handling the meats, and the fact that they don't
always clean the machines between uses, there are just so many opportunities
within the deli counter for bacteria to spread," Godwin said. Instead, opt
for the vacuum-packed meat and cheese in the dairy aisle that are pre-packed in
factories, which are less likely to become contaminated.
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