Day 244 - 03 May 96 - Page 06
1
2 To that effect, it is important to note the Defendants'
3 evidence on the relative youth of McDonald's UK employees,
4 the working pressures, and equipment problems. From this,
5 it is safe to conclude that - given the scale of the
6 operations in the UK - that a number of stores at any one
7 time might have considerable difficulty in maintaining
8 conformity with standard operational procedures. In this
9 context, the system - taken as a whole - might be regarded
10 as flawed, containing in-built inadequacies and systematic
11 fragility, to the extent that undercooked burgers may be
12 sold from time to time. Thus, the destruction of
13 potentially pathogenic organisms in all their produce
14 cannot be guaranteed. That is certainly my view.
15
16 As regards the suppliers' premises, it should be noted that
17 the plant which produced the burgers to which the Preston
18 illness was attributed was clean and in good condition.
19 (Marshall op cit). Furthermore, McDonald's purchasing
20 policy required that all meat used for burger production
21 was obtained from EEC approved slaughterhouses, which thus
22 conformed with the most stringent regulatory codes then
23 prevalent in the UK. Yet it is apparent from the Preston
24 outbreak that potentially harmful microorganisms were
25 capable of being transmitted through the 'hygienic'
26 production system."
27 A. It is worth mentioning a point here, if I may?
28
29 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Keep your voice up, please, Dr. North?
30 A. I am sorry. The current EEC system, which is now in
31 force for all slaughterhouses in the UK, has, to the
32 admission of the EC Commission, been based on systems
33 developed and largely finalised in and around the 1860s and
34 are largely ritualistic in application and have very little
35 relevance to the hygienic production meat, so that the
36 whole context of EC approval has very little to do with the
37 real application of hygiene under modern conditions.
38
39 MR. MORRIS: Continuing to read:
40
41 "What was also evident from subsequent enquiries was that
42 there were many aspects of the McDonald's cooking operation
43 which could have been improved, and - after the UK outbreak
44 - many changes were introduced. But, if changes were
45 necessary, they could have been made before, not after the
46 outbreak, so preventing a great deal of unnecessary harm
47 and distress.
48
49 It is easy to be wise after the event, but - in my opinion
50 - this is hardly the case here. In the first half of
51 1982, two E.Coli outbreaks occurred, one in Oregon and the
52 other in Michigan USA, arising from the consumption of
53 burgers (Riley, et al, 1982)" -- and that is the report
54 from the National Centre for Infectious Diseases, Centre
55 for Diseases Control, yes ----
56 A. That is the one, yes.
57
58 Q. -- That you have seen. The other report that you refer to
59 is the Public Health Laboratory Service Final Report and a
60 cluster of cases of haemorrhageick colitis and haemolytic