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  • 2019-01-15 (xsd:date)
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  • Did lettuce kill more Americans than undocumented immigrants? (en)
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  • As the country was slogging into the third week of a government shutdown, a claim about federal paralysis caught fire on social media. Over an image of leafy vegetables growing in a field, a meme posted on Jan. 9 said, Lettuce killed more Americans this year than undocumented immigrants. (The accompanying comment on the Facebook post was, lettuce prey.) The shutdown stemmed from President Donald Trump’s desire to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border and Democrats’ opposition to funding it at levels Trump considers sufficient. The resulting lapse in federal appropriations has shuttered many parts of the government, including some food-safety inspections handled by the Food and Drug Administration. The assertion was amplified when a Hollywood writer tweeted it the following day. Last year lettuce killed more Americans than undocumented immigrants so it's a good thing we're halting food inspections over a wall that won't work, tweeted Ally Maynard , a television producer with 80,500 followers. It inspired at least 67,000 retweets and 209,000 likes through Jan. 15. Last year lettuce killed more Americans than undocumented immigrants so it's a good thing we're halting food inspections over a wall that won't work. — Ally Maynard (@missmayn) January 10, 2019 Social media users wondered if what she wrote was accurate. Some searched the Centers for Disease Control looking for more information. We decided to help everyone out. How many people died of foodborne illnesses from lettuce in 2018? The number appears to be at least five. There were two high-profile E. Coli outbreaks from romaine lettuce in 2018. The first, in May 2018, resulted in five deaths and at least 210 illnesses, about half of which resulted in hospitalizations. The second, in November, resulted in a few dozen illnesses but no reported deaths. Don’t assume that the nonfatal illnesses were minor, however. E. coli O157:H7, the pathogen involved in these outbreaks, can cause a life-threatening complication called hemolytic uremic syndrome among the very young or elderly, said Craig Hedberg, a University of Minnesota epidemiologist. There were 27 such cases in the first outbreak, and two in the second. How many people were killed by undocumented immigrants in 2018? As for undocumented immigrants and crime, let’s start with the big picture: They have been found to be no more likely than U.S.-born individuals to take part in crime. One study published earlier this year by sociologists from the University of Wisconsin and Purdue University, for instance, concluded that undocumented immigration does not increase violence. And there’s a bigger body of academic research that suggests that immigrants, regardless of legal status, are no more likely to commit criminal acts than native-born Americans, said Christopher P. Salas-Wright, an assistant professor at Boston University’s School of Social Work. We continue to find that areas with higher concentrations of immigrants have lower violent crime rates, said Charis E. Kubrin, a University of California-Irvine criminologist, citing a recent paper she wrote. Kubrin added that for the most part, studies find that people who migrate are a self-selecting group who want to better their lives, provide for their families back in their home countries and don’t want to risk getting in trouble with the law. There were some high-profile examples in 2018 of undocumented immigrants being charged with homicide. One was Cristhian Bahena Rivera , a farmhand who was charged with murdering 20-year-old University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts. Another was Gustavo Perez Arriaga , who was charged with killing police officer Ronil Singh in Newman, Calif. Neither case has been adjudicated yet. But while anecdotes exist, hard data about killings by undocumented immigrants is hard to find. As we’ve noted previously , it is not a statistic that is calculated on a national basis. So the best we can manage is guesswork. We know that there have recently been about 19,000 homicides every year in the United States, and presumably some fraction of them have been committed by undocumented immigrants. Comparing the estimated size of the undocumented immigrant population ( 10.7 million ) and the full U.S. population ( 327 million ), the roughest possible calculation would suggest that about 600 of those homicides would have been committed by undocumented immigrants per year. That’s not far off another data point we have — the number of convictions of illegal immigrants for homicides in Texas. Cato Institute senior immigration policy analyst Alex Nowrasteh pointed to a Texas Department of Public Safety website that reported 238 homicide convictions of undocumented immigrants between June 1, 2011, and Dec. 31, 2018. Based on his communications with the agency, Nowrasteh was able to pinpoint 39 convictions that occurred in Texas in 2018. These are convictions for homicides that occurred in a variety of years, so it’s not perfectly comparable, but it’s a rough estimate. If you prorate Texas’s 39 homicide convictions to the country as a whole — simply using population — it works out to 445 nationally. As we’ve emphasized, these are back-of-the-envelope calculations. But even if these estimates — a couple hundred homicides by undocumented immigrants — are high by a factor of 10, they almost certainly outpaced the five lettuce deaths in 2018. How a slight change in wording could dramatically change the calculation So the statement that rocketed around social media is wrong. But a small change in wording could have made a big difference. If the statement had used the word food rather than lettuce, it might well have been correct. (This is also a fuller description of what the FDA inspects anyway.) A 2011 study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention used models to estimate the annual number of deaths due to 31 pathogens to be 2,612, or 1,351 if you include only domestically acquired foodborne illnesses. Either figure would be larger than the estimate of couple hundred deaths every year at the hands of undocumented immigrants. (These numbers are also larger than the number of confirmed deaths from foodborne illness in recent years, but that is generally chalked up to gaps in reporting and medical uncertainties about what actually led to a person’s death.) For her part, Maynard told PolitiFact that her comparison was definitely meant in jest, and that finding hard data on the question was difficult. Our ruling The meme said, Lettuce killed more Americans this year than undocumented immigrants. To the best we can tell from imperfect data, that’s incorrect. However a small tweak -- changing the term to food, which is the FDA’s full responsibility -- would likely have supported the meme’s point. On its own, we rate the statement False. Share the Facts 2019-01-15 20:59:32 UTC PolitiFact 2 1 7 PolitiFact Rating: False Lettuce killed more Americans this year than undocumented immigrants. Viral image on the Internet https://www.facebook.com/reallypoliticked/photos/a.398231337048228/934340606770629/?type=3&theater a meme Wednesday, January 9, 2019 2019-01-09 Read More info (en)
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