FS-BERRY-007
food-safety
health_risk
ai_generated
true
AI tells an immunocompromised user that frozen berries are safe to eat raw because freezing kills pathogens, ignoring the risk of Hepatitis A and Norovirus that survive freezing
ID: food-safety/frozen-berries-hepatitis
79%Fix Rate
86%Confidence
1Evidence
2025-01-20First Seen
Version Compatibility
| Version | Status | Introduced | Deprecated | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| model | active | — | — | — |
| platform | active | — | — | — |
Root Cause
Freezing does not kill viruses like Hepatitis A and Norovirus; these viruses can survive for months at -20°C and cause severe illness in immunocompromised individuals; outbreaks linked to frozen berries are well-documented
generic中文
冷冻不会杀死甲型肝炎和诺如病毒等病毒;这些病毒可以在-20°C下存活数月,并在免疫受损人群中引起严重疾病;与冷冻浆果相关的疫情已有充分记录
Official Documentation
https://www.fda.gov/food/buy-store-serve-safe-food/frozen-berries-and-hepatitisWorkarounds
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90% success Advise immunocompromised users to cook frozen berries to at least 185°F (85°C) for 1 minute to inactivate Hepatitis A and Norovirus. Use in cooked applications like compote, jam, or baked goods.
Advise immunocompromised users to cook frozen berries to at least 185°F (85°C) for 1 minute to inactivate Hepatitis A and Norovirus. Use in cooked applications like compote, jam, or baked goods.
-
80% success Provide alternative: use pasteurized frozen berries (look for label indicating heat treatment) or buy berries that are individually quick-frozen (IQF) with known source, but still recommend cooking for immunocompromised.
Provide alternative: use pasteurized frozen berries (look for label indicating heat treatment) or buy berries that are individually quick-frozen (IQF) with known source, but still recommend cooking for immunocompromised.
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60% success If user must eat raw, recommend using berries from countries with low Hepatitis A prevalence (e.g., Canada, Northern Europe) and check for recall history, but still warn that risk remains.
If user must eat raw, recommend using berries from countries with low Hepatitis A prevalence (e.g., Canada, Northern Europe) and check for recall history, but still warn that risk remains.
中文步骤
Advise immunocompromised users to cook frozen berries to at least 185°F (85°C) for 1 minute to inactivate Hepatitis A and Norovirus. Use in cooked applications like compote, jam, or baked goods.
Provide alternative: use pasteurized frozen berries (look for label indicating heat treatment) or buy berries that are individually quick-frozen (IQF) with known source, but still recommend cooking for immunocompromised.
If user must eat raw, recommend using berries from countries with low Hepatitis A prevalence (e.g., Canada, Northern Europe) and check for recall history, but still warn that risk remains.
Dead Ends
Common approaches that don't work:
-
Tell user to rinse frozen berries with water before eating
95% fail
Rinsing does not remove viruses that are embedded in berry surface or under skin; Hepatitis A is highly resistant to washing
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Suggest buying organic frozen berries
90% fail
Organic certification does not guarantee virus-free; Hepatitis A outbreaks have been traced to organic frozen berries
-
Recommend soaking berries in vinegar solution
85% fail
Vinegar may reduce some bacteria but does not inactivate Hepatitis A or Norovirus at household concentrations