Is it OK to Eat Expired Food?
Study finds expired food in stores nationwide. Is it a cause for concern?
Oct. 7, 2009— -- Grocery shoppers beware: It's likely that a few of the items in your cart should have been removed from the shelves because they were past the expiration date.
But chances are you won't know that because in most states expiration dates aren't required, and where dating is mandatory it is inconsistent and confusing.
And that's just for the highly perishable items like poultry and dairy products. You may need a guidebook to decipher the expiration code on a can of beans, but according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, no such book exists.
Community volunteers working with the University of Southern California found that the problem is particularly acute in lower income, inner city areas, where they found at least one expired product on every third visit to the market.
And on 18 percent of their visits to the store, they found at least three expired poultry, beef and dairy items.
But they also found expired items when they visited stores far beyond their neighborhoods, including other states and the posh suburbs along the beaches to the west of Los Angeles.
"It's an issue that is more widely distributed than I had thought," LaVonna Lewis, a professor in USC's school of policy, planning and development, said in an interview.
For the past decade Lewis has been working with about 90 volunteers from the non-profit Community Health Councils, Inc., in a program designed to get local people involved in monitoring food suppliers in their area.
The volunteers have found that South Central Los Angeles, which is predominately black, is served mostly by smaller mom and pop stores and fast food restaurants in sharp contrast to the wealthier areas to the west.
But five supermarket chains also have a smattering of stores in the poorer part of town, and when the volunteers turned their attention to those stores they were in for a surprise.