CDC issued a report on a 2017 Salmonella outbreak associated with coconut. Tere were 19 cases from pre-cut coconut pieces. From the investigation, it was determined that the Salmonella originated with the source product from Indonesia.
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/67/wr/mm6739a5.htm?s_cid=mm6739a5_e
Outbreak of Salmonella Chailey Infections Linked To Precut Coconut Pieces — United States and Canada, 2017
Weekly / October 5, 2018 / 67(39);1098–1100
Thursday, October 4, 2018
CDC - Multiple Cyclospora Outbreaks in 2018
CDC issued a report detailing smaller Cyclospora outbreaks that were in addition to two large outbreaks that occurred this past summer. Those additional cases were associated with other types of fresh produce, including basil and cilantro
The two major outbreaks were 1) the prepackaged vegetable trays (containing broccoli, cauliflower, and carrots) sold at a convenience store chain in the Midwest where there were 250 laboratory-confirmed cases reported and 2) salads (containing carrots, romaine, and other leafy greens) sold at a fast food chain in the Midwest [McDonalds] where there were 511 laboratory-confirmed cases.
Smaller outbreaks included
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/67/wr/mm6739a6.htm?s_cid=mm6739a6_e
Notes from the Field: Multiple Cyclosporiasis Outbreaks — United States, 2018
Weekly / October 5, 2018 / 67(39);1101–1102
The two major outbreaks were 1) the prepackaged vegetable trays (containing broccoli, cauliflower, and carrots) sold at a convenience store chain in the Midwest where there were 250 laboratory-confirmed cases reported and 2) salads (containing carrots, romaine, and other leafy greens) sold at a fast food chain in the Midwest [McDonalds] where there were 511 laboratory-confirmed cases.
Smaller outbreaks included
- Two basil-associated clusters with 8 cases each were identified among persons in two different states who became ill during June.
- Three clusters associated with Mexican-style restaurants in the Midwest have resulted in reports of 53 confirmed cases in persons who became ill - consumption of cilantro was found to be significantly associated with illness..
- Additional clusters associated with Mexican-style restaurants were identified but a single vehicle of infection has not been identified.
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/67/wr/mm6739a6.htm?s_cid=mm6739a6_e
Notes from the Field: Multiple Cyclosporiasis Outbreaks — United States, 2018
Weekly / October 5, 2018 / 67(39);1101–1102
Ariz Company Recalls 6.5 Million Pounds of Beef Product After Linked to 57 Cases of Salmonella Illness
A Tolleson, Ariz. establishment, is recalling approximately 6,500,966 pounds of various raw, non-intact beef products after that product was linked to an outbreak of Salmonella Newport where 57 cases in 16 states, dates from August 5 to September 6. 2018. Product is ground beef sold in 1, 3, 5 and 10 lb chubs for packing into ground beef packs for sales by retailers and for further processing.
From the report, "On September 5, 2018, FSIS was notified of an investigation of Salmonella Newport illnesses with reported consumption of several different FSIS-regulated products by case-patients. The first store receipt potentially linking the purchase of FSIS-regulated product to a case-patient was received on September 19, 2018; FSIS was then able to begin traceback of ground beef products. To date, eight case-patients have provided receipts or shopper card numbers, which have enabled product traceback investigations. FSIS, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and state public health and agriculture partners have now determined that raw ground beef was the probable source of the reported illnesses. Traceback has identified JBS as the common supplier of the ground beef products."
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/recalls-and-public-health-alerts/recall-case-archive/archive/2018/recall-085-2018-release
JBS Tolleson, Inc. Recalls Raw Beef Products Due to Possible Salmonella Newport Contamination
Class I Recall
085-2018
Health Risk: High
Oct 4, 2018
From the report, "On September 5, 2018, FSIS was notified of an investigation of Salmonella Newport illnesses with reported consumption of several different FSIS-regulated products by case-patients. The first store receipt potentially linking the purchase of FSIS-regulated product to a case-patient was received on September 19, 2018; FSIS was then able to begin traceback of ground beef products. To date, eight case-patients have provided receipts or shopper card numbers, which have enabled product traceback investigations. FSIS, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and state public health and agriculture partners have now determined that raw ground beef was the probable source of the reported illnesses. Traceback has identified JBS as the common supplier of the ground beef products."
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/recalls-and-public-health-alerts/recall-case-archive/archive/2018/recall-085-2018-release
JBS Tolleson, Inc. Recalls Raw Beef Products Due to Possible Salmonella Newport Contamination
Class I Recall
085-2018
Health Risk: High
Oct 4, 2018
NC Establishment Recalls Ham Product after Linked to Listeria Outbreak, One Death
Johnston County Hams, a Smithfield, N.C. establishment, is recalling approximately 89,096 pounds of ready-to-eat ham products that may be adulterated with Listeria monocytogenes, The recall was initiated after "FSIS was notified that a person ill with listeriosis reported consuming a ham product produced at Johnston County Hams. Working in conjunction with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state public health and agriculture partners, FSIS determined that there is a link between the Listeria monocytogenes illnesses and ham products produced at Johnston County Hams. The epidemiologic investigation identified a total of four listeriosis confirmed illnesses, including one death, between July 8, 2017 and August 11, 2018. FSIS collected two deli ham product samples from the Johnston County Hams, Inc. facility in 2016 and in early 2018. Whole genome sequencing results showed that Listeria monocytogenes identified in deli ham both years was closely related genetically to Listeria monocytogenes from ill people."
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/recalls-and-public-health-alerts/recall-case-archive/archive/2018/recall-084-2018-release
Johnston County Hams Recalls Ready-To-Eat Ham Products Due to Possible Listeria Contamination
Class I Recall
084-2018
Health Risk: High
Health Risk: High
Oct 3, 2018
Monday, October 1, 2018
Pennsylvania Expands Disease Management Areas (DMA) for CWD in White Tailed Deer
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is an infectious neurodegenerative disease that affects captive and free-ranging deer, elk, and moose that causes death in the animal within a year or two after infection. It is caused by a prion, a misfolded protein that is able to induce abnormal folding of specific normal cellular proteins most often in the brain. While there has been no known transmission to humans, there is a similar disease in humans called Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease, and mad cow disease in cattle.
Like in other parts of the country, the issue is becoming bigger in states like Pennsylvania where deer hunting is a 1.6 billion dollar industry with nearly 1 million hunters taking to the woods each fall. "It's been confirmed in 177 free-ranging deer in Pennsylvania since 2012, including 78 in 2017 and 26 through June 2018."
Transmission can be passed from deer to deer or from the deer to soil to deer. The prion has been found to be active 2 years in the soil where an infected animal died. This creates a huge challenge in terms of eradication.
Pennsylvania has set up 4 disease management areas (DMA) to enact restrictions on hunters to prevent potential movement of CWD and free testing of deer heads for the prion. Hunters are requested not to consume high-risk parts, properly bone out a carcass to remove brain and spinal cord material as well as cutting away all fatty tissue will remove remaining lymph nodes.
Source (2012) Occurrence, Transmission, and Zoonotic Potential of Chronic Wasting Disease, Emerging Infectious Diseases
NBC 10
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Pennsylvania-Sounding-the-Alarm-On-Deer-Disease-494419521.html
Pennsylvania Sounding the Alarm on Chronic Wasting Disease Among Deer
By Kurt Bresswein
Like in other parts of the country, the issue is becoming bigger in states like Pennsylvania where deer hunting is a 1.6 billion dollar industry with nearly 1 million hunters taking to the woods each fall. "It's been confirmed in 177 free-ranging deer in Pennsylvania since 2012, including 78 in 2017 and 26 through June 2018."
Transmission can be passed from deer to deer or from the deer to soil to deer. The prion has been found to be active 2 years in the soil where an infected animal died. This creates a huge challenge in terms of eradication.
Pennsylvania has set up 4 disease management areas (DMA) to enact restrictions on hunters to prevent potential movement of CWD and free testing of deer heads for the prion. Hunters are requested not to consume high-risk parts, properly bone out a carcass to remove brain and spinal cord material as well as cutting away all fatty tissue will remove remaining lymph nodes.
Source (2012) Occurrence, Transmission, and Zoonotic Potential of Chronic Wasting Disease, Emerging Infectious Diseases
NBC 10
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Pennsylvania-Sounding-the-Alarm-On-Deer-Disease-494419521.html
Pennsylvania Sounding the Alarm on Chronic Wasting Disease Among Deer
By Kurt Bresswein
This Week in Mislabeled Products - Week Ending Sept 29. 2018
Improper Line Clean-out in Snack Process - Whole Foods Market is voluntarily recalling 365 Everyday Value White Corn Tortilla Chips because the product may contain undeclared milk that was not listed on the product label. The issue was discovered after a customer notified Whole Foods Market that the tortilla chip bag also contained other snack mix products.
Improper Line Clean-Out in Dairy Process - Harris Teeter is notifying shoppers of a voluntarily recall of Harris Teeter Low Fat Frozen Yogurt Cookies & Cream due to undeclared peanut product. The firm was notified of the problem via a consumer comment of finding peanut butter cups in the product. Subsequent investigation indicated that the problem was caused by a mix-up of the cartons.
https://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm621665.htm
Allergy Alert Issued in Whole Foods Market Stores Nationwide for Undeclared Milk in 365 Everyday Value White Corn Tortilla Chips
For Immediate Release
September 25, 2018
Improper Line Clean-Out in Dairy Process - Harris Teeter is notifying shoppers of a voluntarily recall of Harris Teeter Low Fat Frozen Yogurt Cookies & Cream due to undeclared peanut product. The firm was notified of the problem via a consumer comment of finding peanut butter cups in the product. Subsequent investigation indicated that the problem was caused by a mix-up of the cartons.
https://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm621665.htm
Allergy Alert Issued in Whole Foods Market Stores Nationwide for Undeclared Milk in 365 Everyday Value White Corn Tortilla Chips
For Immediate Release
September 25, 2018
Fewer Teens Working in Foodservice Puts Cost Pressure with Low Skilled Labor Force
An interesting read in Nation's Restaurant News regarding the decrease of teens working in foodservice. We have all seen the Help Wanted signs in nearly every restaurant we visit. This continued trend of less teens working in foodservice jobs puts cost pressure on all who hire low skill-level workers, including food processing.
"Participation has declined over the years, but even as recently as 2000, over 50 percent of teens participated in the workforce. Today that number is around 30 percent. The BLS [Bureau of Labor Statistics] expects the downward trend to continue."
To fill their needs, foodservice is turning to older workers. The "average age of a fast-food employee is 24 years old." "At this point, only 18 percent of restaurant-level employees at limited-service brands are younger than 18 years old, according to Tdn2K. At full-service brands, only 5 percent."
To fill their needs, foodservice is turning to older workers. The "average age of a fast-food employee is 24 years old." "At this point, only 18 percent of restaurant-level employees at limited-service brands are younger than 18 years old, according to Tdn2K. At full-service brands, only 5 percent."
This puts costing pressure on not just foodservice, but any companies that are hiring low skilled workers. "As employees became more mature, Service Employees International Union and the Fight for $15 stepped in to organize employees and work toward higher wages. So far, they’ve seen a fair share of successes. Wages for fast-food workers are on their way to $15 an hour in New York, California, Seattle, Minneapolis and Washington, D.C."
Hiring is not the only concern, so is retention. "According to restaurant analytics firm TDn2K, the latest turnover numbers for the restaurant-level employees is 124 percent for limited-service brands and 100 percent for full-service."
Hiring is not the only concern, so is retention. "According to restaurant analytics firm TDn2K, the latest turnover numbers for the restaurant-level employees is 124 percent for limited-service brands and 100 percent for full-service."
Nation's Restaurant News
https://www.nrn.com/workforce/loving-and-losing-teen-labor?NL=NRN-02_
On loving and losing teen labor
How teens helped define fast food, and where the industry is without them
Gloria Dawson | Sep 28, 2018
On loving and losing teen labor
How teens helped define fast food, and where the industry is without them
Gloria Dawson | Sep 28, 2018
Friday, September 28, 2018
FDA and CDC Close Investigation on Sugar Smacks Cereal
FDA and CDC announced that the investigation and recall with the Salmonella Outbreak associated with Sugar Smacks cereal is completed. At the closure point, there were 135 cases with 34 hospitalizations. A concern is that people may still have the recalled product on their shelf.
The product was packed by a co-manufacturing facility owned by Kerry Inc. The Kerry facility was issued a Warning Letter in July. This facility was found to have a Salmonella issue.
From that warning letter, "Between September 29, 2016 and May 16, 2018, you repeatedly found Salmonella throughout your facility, including in cereal production rooms. During this time period, you had 81 positive Salmonella environmental samples and 32 positive Salmonella vector samples (samples taken in response to finding a positive on routine testing), including four Salmonella (b)(4) samples in the cereal coating room (Line (b)(4)) and one Salmonella (b)(4) sample in the cereal (b)(4) room (Line (b)(4)). Further, you had repeated findings of other Salmonella species in some production lines and rooms used for the manufacture of cereal. These repeated findings of Salmonella in your environment should have resulted in a reanalysis of your food safety plan".
So in this case, why was Kellogg still packing RTE cereal in that plant if these issues were identified in the co-manufacturer's own records? Did their audit analysis find these issues?
(Reading the Warning Letter at the time it was issued, it was easy to assume it was an ingredient rather than a finished RTE product because of the prevalence of Salmonella found by FDA as well as the company's own internal testing. Seeing that the company was packing RTE cereal is concerning, based on what is in the FDA Warning Letter).
From that warning letter, "Between September 29, 2016 and May 16, 2018, you repeatedly found Salmonella throughout your facility, including in cereal production rooms. During this time period, you had 81 positive Salmonella environmental samples and 32 positive Salmonella vector samples (samples taken in response to finding a positive on routine testing), including four Salmonella (b)(4) samples in the cereal coating room (Line (b)(4)) and one Salmonella (b)(4) sample in the cereal (b)(4) room (Line (b)(4)). Further, you had repeated findings of other Salmonella species in some production lines and rooms used for the manufacture of cereal. These repeated findings of Salmonella in your environment should have resulted in a reanalysis of your food safety plan".
So in this case, why was Kellogg still packing RTE cereal in that plant if these issues were identified in the co-manufacturer's own records? Did their audit analysis find these issues?
(Reading the Warning Letter at the time it was issued, it was easy to assume it was an ingredient rather than a finished RTE product because of the prevalence of Salmonella found by FDA as well as the company's own internal testing. Seeing that the company was packing RTE cereal is concerning, based on what is in the FDA Warning Letter).
https://www.fda.gov/food/recallsoutbreaksemergencies/outbreaks/ucm610827.htm
FDA Investigated Multistate Outbreak of Salmonella Mbandaka Infections Linked to Kellogg’s Honey Smacks Cereal
FDA Investigated Multistate Outbreak of Salmonella Mbandaka Infections Linked to Kellogg’s Honey Smacks Cereal
Hawaiian Macadamia Nut Company Recalls Product After Well Water Tests Positive for E. coli
Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Corporation is voluntarily recalling all of its products produced at the Keaau facility between Sept. 6 - 21, 2018 due to a potential contamination of Escherichia coli (E. coli). The recall was initiated due to E.coli being detected in the well water and distribution system that supplies the firm’s operations. No illnesses related to the water have been reported to the state.
"On Sept. 21, 2018 DOH notified Mauna Loa that a water sample in their distribution system was positive for E. coli. It was thought that a possible reason for contamination was the result of a disinfection system malfunction. Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Corporation took immediate action to notify employees and the public. Subsequent test samples remained positive for E.coli and the State DOH has advised Mauna Loa to recall its products as an additional safety measure. The firm has been closed since Sept. 21, 2018 and will remain closed until the water clears State DOH drinking water standards."
https://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm621806.htm
Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Corporation Voluntarily Recalls
For Immediate Release
September 24, 2018
"On Sept. 21, 2018 DOH notified Mauna Loa that a water sample in their distribution system was positive for E. coli. It was thought that a possible reason for contamination was the result of a disinfection system malfunction. Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Corporation took immediate action to notify employees and the public. Subsequent test samples remained positive for E.coli and the State DOH has advised Mauna Loa to recall its products as an additional safety measure. The firm has been closed since Sept. 21, 2018 and will remain closed until the water clears State DOH drinking water standards."
https://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/ucm621806.htm
Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Corporation Voluntarily Recalls
For Immediate Release
September 24, 2018
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