Today, my daughter-in-law dropped off our five month old granddaughter along with a bottle of Abbott Nutrition’s Similac baby formula to supplement the breast milk she pumps. You may remember three years ago, the Similac brand had a major food safety recall due to Cronobacter sakazakii contamination that killed two babies. My wife raised a proverbial red flag questioning whether to feed our granddaughter that brand of formula. Should we trust that brand?
So, I reached out to my some of my food safety network of friends and asked the question “would you feed that brand of formula to your family?” The responses I received were evenly divided with these two being fairly representative :
My effort to get guidance from my food safety network was of no help. Neither answer gave us much confidence or trust in the brand.
Continuing the discussion, I challenged my wife, why do still you buy Boar’s Head cold cuts, even after the Listeria outbreak? She replied “because I know that Boar’s Head set up a Food Safety Council, lead by people we know really well. I trust them.”
I’m not making this up, literally, three hours later I receive a Linked In notification of a post from Frank Yiannas, “Today, Boar’s Head paused production at all of their plants to hold what they’re calling Food Safety Promise Day. Yes, they had a tragic incident &, of course, our thoughts will always remain with those hurt & harmed and their families. I agreed to help investigate the root cause & find solutions to prevent something like this from happening again – not to serve as a defense expert witness. And they’ve allowed me to do just that. In many outbreaks, the reality of what occurred remains elusive & substantive corrective actions are rarely shared with the public. Here’s an attempt to do things differently. ”
Frank and I messaged each other and he told me “While prevention must always be our primary focus, if significant events do occur, I hope what we’ve done serves as the new playbook and expectation – conduct a proper and thorough root cause investigation to determine with specificity what happened, implement science-based and effective controls, and tell that public what you’ve done to prevent it from ever happening again.”
Frank is right and the food industry should learn from this. I would add that the transparency Boar’s Head has demonstrated today will significantly increase consumer’s trust of the brand. Boar’s Head posted this page to their company’s website: https://boarshead.com/foodsafety
Post Script, my daughter-in-law decided against the formula and bought their competitor’s brand. It’s all about trust.