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[cdn-nucl-l] Radiation to Save the Day!
Washington Post, October 23rd (text below)
"Irradiation Explored As Answer to Anthrax
Process Used on Food Could Be Adapted To Rid Mail of Pathogens, Industry
Says"
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A36218-2001Oct22.html
The LA Times, October 26th
"Hundreds of Postal Centers to Begin Using Radiation to Sanitize Mail"
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-000085307oct26.story?coll=
la-headlines-nation
IAEA WorldAtom, October 25th
"To counteract health threats from pathogens like anthrax, commercial
irradiation processes stand among preventive measures"
http://www.iaea.or.at/worldatom/Press/News/09252001_news.shtml
Irradiation Explored As Answer to Anthrax
Process Used on Food Could Be Adapted To Rid Mail of Pathogens, Industry
Says
By Michael E. Ruane
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 23, 2001; Page A11
It's already done with chicken, spice, ground beef and baby bottle nipples.
The U.S. mail may be next.
And soon.
In the midst of the growing anthrax scare, the government is exploring the
possibility that irradiation or other state-of-the-art sterilizing
technology might be used to cleanse the mail of pathogens.
In the weeks since mailed anthrax bacteria have infected people in Florida,
New York and Washington, experts have been scrambling to figure out how to
kill the microbe before it reaches mail handlers or recipients.
Irradiation appears to be one of the most viable solutions, experts said.
A fairly extensive industry exists that uses irradiation to sanitize food
and medical, hygiene and packaging supplies, often in bulk or in assembly
line settings. And industry officials believe irradiation might safely
sanitize the mail, too.
"That is being explored," U.S. Postal Service spokeswoman Sue Brennan said
yesterday, adding that the agency did not want to divulge its strategy. "We
are using the latest technology in targeted areas to ensure that the mail is
safe."
Irradiation, for one, has been used in sterilization for decades.
"Irradiation is used for food to reduce pathogens and extend shelf life, and
there is thinking now that irradiation does such a nice job . . . that maybe
it can be applicable to mail also," said Jeffrey T. Barach, vice president
for special projects at the National Food Processors Association.
"There is some evidence, and some strong evidence, that irradiating
bacterial spores, whether they be food pathogens or anthrax spores, does a
really nice job of destroying the spores so that they lose their
pathogenicity," he said.
Although some scientists contend that the effects of radiation on food are
not all known, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it is "a
safe and effective technology that can prevent many food-borne diseases."
Disease-causing germs are reduced or eliminated, the CDC says, and the food
does not become radioactive.
"In the case of mail," Barach said in an interview yesterday, "if there was
some powdered bacterial spores in there, it would have the effect of
basically killing them or sanitizing them.
"With food, you have the concern about taste and quality after the radiation
effects," he said. "So, generally, fairly low doses of radiation are used on
food products. With mail, of course, nobody tastes mail. You could give it
fairly healthy dosages. It doesn't do anything to the mail. It certainly
doesn't make the product radioactive or leave any residue. So the mail
opener or handler would have no problems in handling the mail after that."
There are three main methods of irradiation, according to the CDC:
• Radiation given off by a radioactive substance such as Cobalt 60, which
can penetrate food up to several feet deep and has been used for decades to
sterilize medical and dental products.
• Electron beams, a nonradioactive but highly accelerated stream of
electrons sprayed from an electron "gun." They do not penetrate as deeply
and are also used to sanitize medical and hygienic products such as baby
bottle nipples and sanitary napkins.
• X-ray radiation, a more potent version of the device used in hospitals and
dental offices.
The latter two technologies are the kind that might be installed in a postal
facility, "where mail could be passed along a conveyor belt and the
treatment given in that regard," Barach said. The first one, using a
radioactive substance, requires larger, static, concrete-reinforced
facilities to which mail might be brought in bulk for treatment, he said.
Food Technology Service Inc., of Mulberry, Fla., outside Tampa, has been
treating food products for several years, and its gamma ray "cell" can
handle pallets of several thousand pounds, plant manager Jonathan Locke said
yesterday.
He said the plant sanitizes poultry, ground beef and spices in a process
that now takes about seven hours but can be reduced to three hours.
Barach said there are only a few food irradiation centers in the United
States so far, "because it hasn't really caught on that much," but there are
scores of facilities that use electron beams to sanitize medical equipment.
Several are operated by San Diego's Titan Corp. and its subsidiary, SureBeam
Corp.
The companies' equipment produces "the total elimination of all pathogens"
on medical products it sanitizes and partial sterilization on food products,
where certain bacteria need to be retained, such as in milk, said spokesman
Wil Williams.
The electron beam apparatus, which can be installed on an existing assembly
line, can kill pathogens "in a matter of seconds," he said.
Asked whether the beam could kill anthrax, he replied, "Yes, anthrax
bacteria and spores."
He declined to reveal whether the Postal Service was interested, saying only
that in recent days, "we've talked to many government entities about this."
© 2001 The Washington Post Company