Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/05/16

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Subject: [Leica] PESO - Today's plate is tomorrow's bait
From: philippe.orlent at pandora.be (Philippe Orlent)
Date: Tue May 16 10:35:28 2006
References: <20060516015016.7EA7E115821@ws1-7.us4.outblaze.com>

I read today that the biggest reservoir for bacterial contamination  
is one's keyboard.


Op 16-mei-06, om 03:50 heeft Marty Deveney het volgende geschreven:

>
>> As far as I'm concerned, it's TODAY'S bait. Parasitologists tend  
>> to pass on
>> raw wild-caught food.
>
> As Jeffrey knows, I am also parasitologist.  I am also risk-averse,  
> but with seafood, the overwhelming risk is always from bacterial  
> contamination.  The only significant fish-borne parasites are the  
> broad tapeworm of fish and Anasakis simplex (links below) and both  
> are comparatively rare and entirely treatable.  There are a few  
> hundred cases in japan a year, out of several billion raw fish  
> meals consumed.  That's good odds.  Take a look at your local  
> health department website and find what the rate of bacterial food  
> poisoning is in any city in the developed world and you'll see what  
> the real risk is.
> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=mmed.section.4713
> http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/172/3/329
> If you don't like sushi, well, you don't like it, but if you do,  
> parasites are no reason to get altogether too paranoid about eating  
> it.  I ate sushi and sashimi by the bucketload in Japan earlier  
> this year and make it at home frequently, from a range of farmed  
> and wild-caught fish.  Getting in your car is much riskier.  I  
> wonder how many people die in car crashes in Ontario, where new  
> laws require any fish that is to be served raw to undergo a  
> compulsory period of freezing (really looking after their  
> population, that local government).
>
> Of course, if you're talking raw bear meat, or some of the other  
> things I've been offered in my travels, forget it.  The risk posed  
> by Trichinella (a nematode that, among other things, encysts in  
> muscle in human cases and is not really easily treated) and other  
> parasites that are prevalent in terrestrial animals throughout much  
> of the world is real.  In a few countries (including New Zealand  
> and Australia) many of these critters are absent.
>
> I'm not saying everyone should eat sushi, I'm just saying that  
> irrational fear of parasites is unjustified.
>
> I have some Leica photos of sushi that I will post tonight, to try  
> to keep this on topic.
>
> Later,
>
> Marty
>
>
> -- 
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Replies: Reply from walt at waltjohnson.com (Walt Johnson) ([Leica] PESO - Today's plate is tomorrow's bait)
In reply to: Message from freakscene at weirdness.com (Marty Deveney) ([Leica] PESO - Today's plate is tomorrow's bait)