E. Coli

  • Posted: August 28th, 2012 - 2:07pm by Doug Powell

    As a large-scale outbreak of Salmonella Braenderup appears to be forming in Canada and the U.S. from Mexican mangoes, New York Times reporter Gardiner Harris, who has written plenty about food safety over the years, has his own crappy experience with mangoes in India.

    Harris writes he accepted a just picked mango from a stranger in New Delhi and that putting it directly into my mouth — skin and all — was stupid.

    “But why did my first horrible case of traveler’s diarrhea in India have to result from a mango? I love mangoes, and India’s vast array of deliciously different mango varieties has been one of the great delights of moving here.

    “You didn’t even wash it?” Dr. Paul Offit, chief of infectious diseases at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, asked me later.

    “No.

    “Even by your standards, that was really stupid,” Dr. Offit said.

    “Indeed, my wife joined me for the first week of my stay here before returning temporarily to the United States, and within four days she became terribly ill. I freely dispensed what turned out to be terrible advice, suggesting in the early hours of her illness that she avoid taking one of the antibiotic pills that we had brought for just such an eventuality.

    “My advice sprang from the mistaken belief that the good bacteria in her gut had a fighting chance against the bad bacteria. “Honey, taking an antibiotic is like carpet-bombing a battlefield,” I told her in confident tones. “You kill off all the good guys as well as the bad guys. Let’s see if the good guys rally first.

    “They did not. As it turns out, the fight against toxic bacteria is largely waged by the body’s immune system, not the sweet-tempered millions found in a spoonful of yogurt.”

    At least he admitted he was dumb. But how much dumb – or slanted – advice was spewed out in the pages of the N.Y. Times over the years?

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 25th, 2012 - 7:11am by Doug Powell

    Several factors hampered investigators’ efforts to determine where the E. coli O157 outbreak originated, said Bill Wharton, spokesman for Public Health - Dayton & Montgomery County. The investigation is finished, he said.

    “This was an extensive investigation that involved many segments of our department,” Wharton said. “It was as thorough and as complete an investigation as we’ve ever done.”

    The outbreak was linked to a July 3 customer appreciation picnic at Neff’s Lawn Care in German Twp. More than 300 people attended the event, and many carried in food to share.

    A statistical analysis of data from 117 interviews of people who attended and ate at the picnic did not conclusively link any of the meat items served to the outbreak, investigators said.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 25th, 2012 - 4:01am by Doug Powell

    A forthcoming international Ironman competition will go ahead despite a recent E-coli contamination on Irish beaches, organizers have said.

    Organisers of the triathlon event, which is set to attract a number of Irish celebrities, said they were satisfied the dangerous bacterial contamination, which has led to the closure of Grattan Beach in Galway, had not spread to the rest of the bay. The news came as swimmers re-entered the icy surf off several southern beaches yesterday, after new tests indicated bacteria levels were falling in sea water.

    The 1.2-mile swimming leg of the triathlon will take place from the promenade in Salthill. Athletes will set off from Blackrock out into the bay and return to Palmer's Rock, along the promenade.

    They will then complete a 90-km bike ride finishing with a run around Salthill. A number of Irish celebrities are set to take part, including former Miss World Rosanna Davison, Grainne Seoige, Keith Barry, Brian Kennedy, Matt Cooper and Ray D'Arcy.

    I don’t know who any of these people are.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 23rd, 2012 - 9:12pm by Doug Powell

    Two more cases of E. coli O157 have been confirmed in Orkney, U.K., bringing the total number of people with the infection to four.

    NHS Orkney said the two new patients, who have the O157 strain, are recovering at home.

    They were among three cases which were previously suspected, the health board said. Two other patients, confirmed earlier this week, are still being treated in hospital.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 22nd, 2012 - 4:48am by Doug Powell

    Five people, including a 4-year-old girl, have been confirmed dead of food poisoning from pickled Chinese cabbage produced by a Sapporo food company. Another two deaths are believed to be related to E. coli O157 found in the cabbage.

    The Daily Yomiuri Online reported today that the Sapporo-based food company that processed the cabbage is suspected of failing to properly sterilize the cabbage by heating.

    Many details regarding how the E. coli O157 infections reached epidemic proportions have yet to be clarified. One possible factor behind the mass food poisoning is a method of using less salt when pickling vegetables to suit consumer tastes.

    The pickled Chinese cabbage in question was produced by the food company Iwai Shokuhin in Sapporo.

    The company said it produced the pickled cabbage by first washing the vegetables with water before soaking them in an antiseptic solution for 10 minutes. The vegetables were then washed a second time.

    The products were shipped after the cabbage was pickled for 24 hours in brine mixed with acidic ingredients, company officials said.

    The contaminated pickled cabbage was made Saturday. The amount produced on that day was double that of weekdays, the officials said.

    Each of the firm's 12 employees in charge of pickling wore masks and gloves. No E. coli bacillus were found in groundwater used for washing purposes in a checkup conducted after the incident, the officials said.

    Officials at the Sapporo municipal health center said they will investigate whether the bacteria came from mud attached to cabbage that was not fully sterilized.

    E. coli O157 from livestock roaming – and pooping on -- cabbage fields has been the suggested etiology of several outbreaks in the past 25 years. It is difficult to wash off, but proper preservation – salt, acid – should take care of things.

    Health center officials also noted that Iwai Shokuhin failed to record the concentration of the antiseptic solution, raising suspicions that the sterilization process may have been insufficient.

    The Hokkaido prefectural government and the Sapporo municipal government have launched on-the-spot investigations of about 590 pickling facilities in Hokkaido under the Food Sanitation Law.

    Mass poisoning caused by lightly pickled vegetables occurred in Saitama Prefecture in 2000, resulting in a single death, and in 2005 in Kagawa Prefecture, which resulted in five deaths. All fatalities were elderly residents of nursing care facilities.

    In 2002, more than 100 boys and girls at a nursery in Fukuoka were infected with O-157. The incident was traced back to lightly pickled cucumbers.

    "It's possible that O-157 could get mixed with vegetables through fertilizers such as cattle dung," said Prof. Shinichi Yoshida of Kyushu University, a bacteriology expert who participated in probes regarding the poisonings.

    "The E. coli O-157 bacteria wouldn't be killed it if were soaked in brine with a salt concentration similar to seawater, or about 3 percent," he added.

    Vegetables pickled in a fermented mixture of rice bran and brine have relatively high pH readings of about 3.5, which indicates a considerably high acidity that is conducive to killing bacteria, Yoshida said.

    In recent years, however, many consumers prefer low-sodium processed foods and they tend to shy away from highly acidic pickles, Yoshida explained.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 20th, 2012 - 7:55pm by Doug Powell

     Health types are investigating a cluster of seven E. coli cases in Livingston County, New York, up near Buffalo.

    No deaths were reported, although four people were hospitalized. Two have since been discharged, according to health director Joan Ellison.

    “We are gathering information and looking at all possibilities of the source,” Ellison said. “We have nothing concrete to say it’s ‘this’ or ‘that.’ ”

    Stool samples were sent to the state Department of Health lab in Albany to determine the exact strain of E. coli.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 18th, 2012 - 5:15am by Doug Powell

    A 23-year-old is dead after she got E. coli, possibly after eating at a local restaurant. Her family is now asking for an investigation into the restaurant.

    KMOV reports Ciera Brookfield told her family that she felt sick after eating at a Chinese restaurant in Overland, near St. Louis, Missouri.

    Ciera was just 23 when she passed away on Thursday. Her family says the Ladue Horton Watkins High School grad got sick after eating at Hon's Wok, which is next door to where she worked at Woofie's on Woodson Road.

    "She came home about 8 that night. She came in, she laid down on the couch, she said 'mom, I think I have food poisoning,'" said Donna Clark, Ciera's mother. "I went to work, came back and she was very frantic, saying that she thought it was really bad."

    That was last Thursday. By Friday night Ciera was in the ICU. Mercy Hospital confirms that she had E. coli. But Ciera also suffered from Sickle Cell disease, which made the infection worse.

    "It went to her blood stream and for a person with sickle cell, it's harder to fight it," Clark said.

    As Ciera's family grieves, they want the St. Louis County Health Department to investigate the Chinese restaurant.

    "We don't want anybody else to die like my daughter died," Clark said.

    But it's important to note that the CDC says E. coli symptoms usually appear three to four days after someone contracts the bacteria but that it can be as short as one day.

    The St. Louis County Health Department cannot confirm that Ciera contracted E. coli at Hon's Wok. The department is investigating a complaint there but says, at this point, it does not include E. coli.

    "We've been open over 10 years and [nothing] like this [has happened] before," said Thao Vuong, Hon's Wok manager.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 18th, 2012 - 4:47am by Doug Powell

    Canadians are being warned by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency not to eat Tanimura & Antle brand Romaine Lettuce from Salinas, Calif. because it may be contaminated with E. coli O157:H7.

    The affected product, Tanimura & Antle brand Romaine Lettuce, produce of USA, is sold in a plastic package containing 1 head of lettuce. The package bears the UPC0 27918�ى The affected product was sold at retail from August 8, 2012 through August 17, 2012.

    This product has been distributed in Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, Nunavut and Yukon.

    There have been no reported illnesses associated with the consumption of this product.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 17th, 2012 - 8:52pm by Doug Powell

    Four people, including a 4-year-old girl, have been confirmed dead of food poisoning from pickled Chinese cabbage produced by a Sapporo food company.

    The Yomiuri Shimbun reports another two are suspected to have died due to the cabbage.

    According to the city health care center, four people have died of poisoning caused by E. coli O157 after eating pickled Chinese cabbage produced in late July by Iwai Shokuhin. Three of the four victims were women in their 80s and 100s living in elderly care facilities in the city.

    Mass food poisoning occurred at elderly care facilities in and around the city, with 99 patients likely connected to the suspect cabbage.

    Four-year-old girl Ayana Matsumura of Sapporo suffered symptoms from Aug. 6 and died last Saturday.

    The O157 strain discovered in her body was found to be the same strain detected in the cabbage. According to information relayed to the city by her family, she is very likely to have eaten cabbage bought at a supermarket near her house.

    The food firm's president, Norio Iwai, expressed deep regret. "I feel deeply about (the incident) and will do my best to help investigations. I can only say I'm truly sorry," he said.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments
  • Posted: August 17th, 2012 - 7:57pm by Doug Powell

    Hundreds of mourners dressed in bright pink gathered today in Ayrshire for the funeral of tragic E.coli victim Rachel Shaw.

    The Daily Mail reports Rachel's family - including mother Louise Baillie, 38, and father Adam Shaw, 35 - asked mourners attending Dalrymple Parish Church, East Ayrshire, to dress in the eight-year-old's favourite color rather than wearing black.

    A packed Ayrshire church saw family, neighbours, school pals and teachers come to bid a final farewell to the schoolgirl, whose little white coffin was decorated with pink flowers and a framed photograph.

    Rachel died in hospital on Saturday night after contracting E. coli at the end of July. An investigation is underway as to the exact source of the bug, but it is believed she may have contracted it in the U.S. as she had recently returned from visiting her father, who lives there.

    Your rating: None (1 vote)
    E. coli  |  Comments