Title 21 › Chapter CHAPTER 27— - FOOD SAFETY MODERNIZATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - IMPROVING CAPACITY TO DETECT AND RESPOND TO FOOD SAFETY PROBLEMS › § 2224
A "foodborne illness outbreak" means two or more people get the same sickness from eating the same food. The Secretary of Health and Human Services, through the CDC director, must make national systems better at finding, tracking, and reporting food-related illnesses. That includes coordinating federal, State, and local systems (and complaint systems); sharing data more quickly with the FDA, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Homeland Security, State and local agencies, and the public; improving tools and lab methods to link illnesses to specific foods; building electronic searching and “fingerprinting” methods to find new or rare causes; letting the public see combined, non-identifying data quickly; publishing reports at least once a year; creating a way for rapid academic research; and connecting food illness data with other biosurveillance systems, including the National Biosurveillance Integration Center. The law authorizes $24,000,000 for each fiscal years 2011 through 2015 for these activities. The Secretary must keep a diverse working group of experts from government, industry, consumer groups, and academia to meet at least once a year and give an annual public report with advice on priorities, coordination, access to de-identified data, barriers, the need for automatic electronic searches, and specific steps with timelines and resource needs. The Secretary must also make plans to boost State and local capacity so outbreaks are found and stopped faster, investigations move quicker (including rapid shipment of clinical isolates to State labs and more standardized interviews), inspections and enforcement are stronger, partnerships work better, and information is shared promptly with agencies, industry, health care providers, and the public. Not later than 1 year after January 4, 2011, the Secretary must finish a review of State and local capacities and needs, which may include a survey about staffing, lab capacity, information systems, and other needs.
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Food and Drugs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
21 U.S.C. § 2224
Title 21 — Food and Drugs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73