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Whoa182
Mon, Oct-09-06, 14:28
5,200 Pounds Of Beef Recalled Because Of Possible E. Coli Contamination

An Iowa company is recalling about 5,200 pounds of ground beef products distributed from seven states because they could be contaminated with a dangerous strain of E. coli, the government said Friday.

Jim Goeser, owner of Jim’s Market and Locker Inc., said tests have negated the government’s claim that his meat may have the same E. coli strain responsible for three deaths in the recent outbreak of contaminated spinach.

Goeser said he voluntarily issued the recall Friday after federal inspectors questioned the testing methods used by a slaughterhouse in Omaha, Neb. No illnesses have been reported and none likely will, he said.

“We are absolutely confident as we can be that the meat is as clean as it can be,” Goeser told The Associated Press on Saturday.

http://www.ecanadanow.com/science/health/2006/10/07/5200-pounds-of-beef-recalled-because-of-possible-e-coli-contamination/

Toxic carrot juice paralyzes 2 in Toronto

Two Toronto residents are paralyzed after drinking carrot juice that tested positive for a botulism toxin, according to the city's public health department.

"There are two adults who are severely ill in hospital and they had a history of drinking the exact same juice that's been part of the carrot juice recall," Dr. Elizabeth Rea, an associate medical officer of health, told the Toronto Star on Sunday.

The juice, produced by Bolthouse Farms in Bakersfield, Calif., was ordered off North American store shelves late last month after four cases of botulism in the United States were linked to toxic carrot juice.

A Florida woman has been in hospital, unresponsive, since mid-September. Three people in Georgia suffered respiratory failure and are on ventilators since drinking carrot juice a month ago.

Botulism is rare, but it can be fatal and must be treated quickly. Symptoms can include blurred vision, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing and paralysis, Toronto Public Health said.

In severe cases, the paralysis can restrict breathing, forcing patients on to ventilators. There's no word whether the Toronto patients are on ventilators.

Toronto Public Health has warned the public to avoid drinking three brands of carrot juice. The federal regulator, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, issued a product recall covering the three brands on Sept. 30.

Bolthouse Farms bottles the three brands. The recalled products, all sold in both one-litre and 450-millilitre containers, are:

Bolthouse Farms 100% Carrot Juice.
Earthbound Farm Organic Carrot Juice.
President's Choice Organics 100% Pure Carrot Juice.
Products with a "best by" date up to Nov. 11 have been recalled.

Consumers who have any brand should "take it out of the fridge, dump it down the sink," Rae said.

Bolthouse said the cases may have resulted from improper refrigeration. Carrot juice is low in acids, so bacteria can grow unless it's kept below 7 C.

This most recent news of food-poisoning comes after California-grown spinach tainted with a potentially deadly strain of E. coli caused grocers to pull the vegetable from shelves last month. It is suspected in three recent U.S. deaths.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency issued a warning on Sept. 15, advising consumers not to eat fresh spinach from the U.S., including spinach that is bagged, loose or in salad blends.

Juice recall follows spinach concerns

Last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced it was safe to eat U.S.-packaged spinach again, but Canadian health officials have not yet followed suit.

And on Sunday, Nunes Company Inc. in California's Salinas Valley initiated a voluntary recall of green leaf lettuce purchased last week under the Foxy brand name. Foxy is one of the largest suppliers of lettuce, celery, broccoli, vegetable platters and stir-fry mixes in the United States.

The company made the move after concerns about E. coli contamination of its popular brand of lettuce.

While Nunes Company investigators have not found E. coli bacteria on the lettuce itself, company president Tom Nunes Jr. said it was a precautionary measure.

"We're just reacting to a water test only. We know there's generic E. coli on it, but we're not sure what that means," he said. "We're being extra careful. This is precautionary."

Lettuce Is Pulled Amid E. Coli Fears


A week after the Food and Drug Administration lifted its warning against eating spinach, a Salinas, Calif., produce company voluntarily recalled 8,500 cartons of lettuce Sunday after tests found E. coli contamination in the water used for irrigation.

There have been no reported illnesses from consumers of Foxy brand green-leaf lettuce, which was shipped last week by the Nunes Co., one of the nation's largest vegetable suppliers. It is not known yet if any of the lettuce was tainted with E. Coli.

The FDA and California Department of Health Services are investigating to determine the strand and source of contamination, and whether it stems from the same dangerous form of E. Coli found in spinach that was linked to three deaths and nearly 200 illnesses nationwide.

"This is a precautionary measure based upon the recent events in the produce industry and our concern for our customers," said Tom Nunes Jr., president of the company. "No other products except green-leaf lettuce are a part of this recall."

Nunes said his company had recovered about 8,200 cartons of lettuce, which were shipped to distributors Oct. 3-6. Each carton holds 24 heads. He said the remaining 200 to 300 cartons might have been distributed in California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, Oregon, Idaho or Montana. Because the problem was caught early, company officials don't think much of the lettuce made it to grocery stores.

The company's recalled green-leaf lettuce has a V-shaped frame with curly, light green to deep green leaves. It is packaged in a cellophane sleeve with a red Foxy logo on it and the number 6SL0024.

The recall added to the anxiety in California's Central Coast farming community, which is still reeling from the largest E. Coli outbreak ever recorded in the Salinas Valley area.

On Sept. 14, federal officials asked consumers nationwide to avoid fresh spinach. The next day, Natural Selection Foods of San Juan Bautista, Calif., issued a voluntary recall of all its packaged products containing the fresh greens.

The FDA later narrowed the warning to spinach from three counties on the Central Coast. On Sept. 29, officials altered their warning again, limiting it to products that already had been recalled.

As of Oct. 6, 199 cases in 26 states have been linked through DNA testing to the outbreak strain of E. coli O157:H7, which causes an estimated 73,000 cases of infection and 61 deaths in the United States each year. Infection may cause diarrhea, bloody stools, kidney failure or death. Children and the elderly are most at risk.

It is expected to take at least two days for state and federal investigators to determine which strand of E. coli may have affected the Nunes crops.

Bob Perkins, executive director of the Monterey County Farm Bureau, said the industry is "hypersensitive right now," and companies have increased independent tests of soil and water. He said each new report of E. coli was "not only harmful to the brand and image, but it's expensive. There is the risk that someone could get sick from it."

Daniel Sumner, an agricultural economist who heads the Agricultural Issues Center at UC Davis, said the potential impact of the recall could be more widespread than the spinach recall because lettuce is a bigger industry.

"This is bad news for the whole produce industry and the Salinas Valley," Sumner said. "News like this has to make it worse. It makes it hard to say that the problem is isolated. It indicates to consumers that there might be a more fundamental problem."

There had been 20 E. coli outbreaks from lettuce and spinach since 1995 involving the Salinas Valley. Eighteen were linked to lettuce and two to spinach.

In November 2005, the FDA issued a letter outlining prevention procedures to California lettuce growers in an attempt to reduce contamination cases.

"We've never had this before; this is the first time," said Nunes, whose company has been operating since 1976. The family-owned business has 20,000 acres in California and Arizona. "It's not pleasant, but it's something we feel we needed to be doing because of what has been taking place in this industry."

FDA spokeswoman Julie Zawisza said officials were looking into the recall to find out whether it was the same strain as the one found in spinach. Officials have yet to find the source of the E. coli contamination in spinach. Possible sources include contaminated water, manure from nearby cattle farms and poor hygiene.

"If this is a case of bacterial contamination, we would need to find out the scope and whether it affects all Nunes lettuce or is limited, for example, to only certain lots," Zawisza said. "As a standard course of action, we would expect the firm to identify the source of the contamination and take steps to correct [it and to] ensure that it doesn't happen again."

Karen Klonsky, an agricultural economist with the UC Davis cooperative extension, said tainted lettuce crops had the potential to cause greater harm to the public and agriculture than the recent contamination of spinach.

"Spinach is used by only 3% of households," she said. "Lettuce is something else. About 50% of households eat it."

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-lettuce9oct09,1,1461756.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california

KoKo
Mon, Oct-09-06, 16:08
I just heard on the news (Toronto news) that the tainted carrot juice is still on the shelfs in stores!!! The two people are still paralyzed.

I don't suppose too many people on this site drink carrot juice.