WASHINGTON — Testing confirms that meat from poultry fed rations supplemented with pet food scraps containing melamine and related compounds is safe for human consumption, the USDA says in a release.
Based on the validated test results, the department will allow approximately 80,000 birds held on farms in Indiana to be released and approved for processing.
Testing of meat from poultry exposed to the feed in question confirms that melamine does not accumulate in birds and is eliminated by the body quickly, the release says. The testing also reinforces the conclusions of a human health risk assessment that there is a very low risk of illness from the consumption of meat from animals exposed to the feed in question. Poultry held on farms appear healthy, which will be confirmed upon the rigorous inspection that USDA's Food Safety Inspection Service conducts on all poultry during processing.
The risk assessment concludes that in the most extreme risk assessment scenario — when scientists assumed that all the solid food a person consumes in an entire day contained melamine and that the melamine compound cyanuric acid was at levels potentially present in the poultry meat, the potential exposure would be about 250 times lower than the dose considered safe, the department says.
Translated to consumption levels, this means that a person weighing 132 pounds would have to eat more than 800 pounds per day of chicken or other food containing melamine and its compounds to approach a level of consumption that would cause a health concern.