Ruptura de la cadena de frío en atún de Filipinas. / Cold chain break in tuna from Philippines.
- Classification
- Border rejection notification
- Risk
- Potential risk
- Category
- fish and fish products
- Origin
- Philippines
- Notifier
- Spain
What is this? Some tuna from the Philippines may have warmed up too much while being shipped. This can let harmful germs grow.
What's happening? Spain stopped some tuna shipments because the cold chain was broken. The tuna might not be safe to eat.
Does this affect me? If you bought tuna from the Philippines recently, check the package. If it looks or smells bad, do not eat it.
What should I do? Ask your doctor or pharmacist if you feel sick after eating the tuna. Throw away any tuna that seems unsafe.
🤖 This plain-language summary is automatically generated from the official agency notice using AI. It is for general information only — not medical advice. For decisions about your health, always consult a pharmacist or doctor and read the official source linked below.
🔬 Medical / technical details (for professionals)
Classification: Border rejection notification · Risk: Potential risk · Category: fish and fish products · Origin: Philippines · Notifier: Spain
All information on this page comes from the official agency notice. We translate and summarise it; we don't add or edit facts.