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Quorn faces legal action in US over 'gastro-intestinal symptoms'

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Quorn faces legal action in US over 'gastro-intestinal symptoms'

Meikle, health correspondent

Friday May 6, 2005

The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,1477500,00.html

Makers of the meat substitute Quorn face legal action in the US from

a consumer advocacy group which is claiming that the food can cause

allergic reactions.

Avery Goodman, a business lawyer, from Fort , Colorado and

the Centre for Science in the Public Interest, have filed a suit in

what is intended to be a class action against the company and Whole

Foods Market, an organic and natural foods chain.

The centre alleges that many who eat Quorn foods will

develop " unsavoury gastrointestinal symptoms " or more serious

reactions. It has been fighting a long battle against the brand,

sold in Britain since 1986 and the US since 2002, and runs a website

eliciting consumer complaints.

The law suit has been filed in county district court, in

Austin, Texas, where Whole Foods is based. Quorn Foods Inc, the US

subsidiary of UK-based Marlow Foods, accused the centre

of " ridiculous tactics " in trying " to create publicity to undermine

the credibility of Quorn over here " .

, Quorn Foods' vice-president and general manager,

said: " Business is doing incredibly well. We have five of the top

seven items in the meat-free market here. "

Quorn Foods had followed the labelling advice of the regulatory

bodies in the UK and US, he said.

Mr Goodman, an attorney in Fort who handles securities fraud

cases, alleges he experienced a five-hour bout of cramps, nausea,

vomiting and diarrhoea, after buying a Quorn product at a local

Whole Foods store.

" I had the impression it was a product derived from mushrooms, as

this is the impression left by a light reading of the package. I am

not allergic to mushrooms ... I am not allergic to anything in

normal life, except, perhaps Quorn, " he said.

He said he wanted warnings put on products. Two years ago, after

complaints to the Advertising Standards Authority from the CPSI

centre and the mushroom industry to the Advertising Standards

Authority, Marlow Foods had to alter its labels which suggested the

key ingredient of the food was mycoprotein, a mushroom protein. It

is now described as " a nutritious member of the fungi family " .

The Food Standards Agency says on its website: " Some people have

reported allergic reactions to mycoprotein, but this is rare -

research suggests that about one in 100,000 to 200,000 people will

react to it.

" Because it is made from a fungus, it's possible that some people

who react to other fungi or moulds (including when they breathe them

in) may also react to mycoprotein. "

Whole Foods Market said they would defend their company.

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Useful links

Food Standards Agency

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

The Slow Food movement

Sustain - alliance for better food and farming

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