Going public about foodborne illness: ‘I will be forever mad at FDA’

Michael Booth of the Denver Post published an excellent investigative piece Friday about a 2009 E. coli outbreak that appeared linked to lettuce at restaurants in six states, but was never made public. Excerpts below:

The FDA’s decision to let the six-state E. coli probe go dormant, despite clear leads, is part of what some food safety experts call a worrisome "cone of silence" around leafy green produce problems in the United States. These experts say the FDA dropping promising outbreak clues blocks efforts to force better growing and packing methods.

And they say the federal government’s tendency to avoid naming names — even when state officials know the producers and suppliers — robs consumers of vital information. In an October 2011 salmonella outbreak that sickened 68, federal agencies told journalists there was no public benefit in being more specific than problems at Mexican "Restaurant Chain A."

It was the Oklahoma health department that disclosed the chain where many victims had eaten was Taco Bell.

"As someone who is out in fields with farmers, it’s really hard to get them excited about food safety if they never hear about other outbreaks," said Doug Powell, a Kansas State University food scientist who advocates for wider probes and public disclosure. "We have evidence that telling stories makes a difference."

"I will forever be mad that the FDA didn’t pursue" the 2009 E. coli cases that included Colorado, said Kirk Smith, a veterinarian and supervisor of the foodborne disease investigation section of the Minnesota Department of Health.

"It was a smaller outbreak, but still, if you figure out what the food is, even after the fact, you can hopefully get back to where that food was produced and perhaps correct something so there’s not a bigger outbreak in the future."

State health officials grow nervous every September with the crowds, heat and open-air food at the Colorado State Fair in Pueblo. When two cases of E. coli O157:H7 matched at the state lab, one from a Jefferson County child and another from a Pueblo County child, health investigators moved fast.

County reporting forms showed both sick kids had attended the state fair. State officials urged the counties to speed up questioning, trying to nail down where the kids ate and what foods they had in common.

As they waited for more answers, cases in Minnesota, Iowa and three other states loaded illness cases into a national network and matched the genetic fingerprint.
Cases in Minnesota and Iowa had eaten at the same Italian-style restaurant in Omaha, Nebraska, in early September. So had a North Carolina case. When Colorado got its deeper case histories back, it found both state victims had eaten at an Italian-style restaurant in Pueblo.

More questions zeroed in on house salads. Even when the victims hadn’t ordered salad, they had nibbled from a family member’s plate. Eight of 10 cases had eaten lettuce at a restaurant, according to a Colorado outbreak memo obtained through the open records act.

States sought the restaurants’ suppliers. Colorado learned that the lettuce used in Pueblo came from a major produce supplier in the Salinas Valley of California, Tanimura & Antle.

The patients, meanwhile, made slow recoveries. Some were in the hospital for days. E. coli is particularly worrisome to food experts because it can cause severe gastroenteritis, pneumonia and kidney failure.

And then the FDA and CDC dropped the case.

Once state public health officials identify an out-of-state supplier, they rely on the federal government’s powers to move across boundaries and push outbreak probes forward. But what Colorado and Minnesota officials heard was silence.
By mid-October, officials in those states asked the CDC and FDA for a status on the case. On Oct. 28, according to e-mail records released by Colorado, CDC epidemiologist Colin Schwensohn told the states "with no recent cases, this cluster is less of a priority."

Minnesota’s Smith fired back the same afternoon, saying "I think it is a huge mistake for FDA to drop this." Smith’s e-mail to the CDC and other investigators, which he acknowledged was a "rant," went on:

"If FDA won’t fully engage and work backwards from 2 restaurants on a rock solid lead, then all of their claims about making things better are all so much talk."

Colorado officials took a more measured approach, but still protested. "Colorado and other states challenged this decision, but FDA did not change its position about pursuing the traceback further," according to a state memo.

Colorado epidemiologist Alicia Cronquist said in an interview, "We were extremely frustrated." The states got on a conference call and said a deeper probe would prevent future outbreaks, Cronquist said.

The FDA declined comment, beyond the limited information about the federal agencies’ reasoning contained in e-mails at the time, which were released by Colorado in the open records request. Neither the FDA nor the CDC offered responses to specific questions about the 2009 outbreak, or to general questions about how investigations end.

"Consumers of food have a right to know, period. And as taxpayers, consumers have a right to know what public health officials know about those same food producers," said Seattle attorney Bill Marler, a litigator for outbreak victims. Marler’s firm was briefly a co-counsel for one of the Colorado victims suing over the 2009 E coli illnesses.

Early e-mails in the 2009 outbreak identified the restaurants that consumers said they had in common. Colorado named the produce grower, Tanimura & Antle, in its wrap-up memo, but said the restaurants did not appear to be at fault. Tanimura & Antle did not return calls seeking comment.

KSU’s Powell argues for more disclosure. At the least, he said, CDC policy should make it clear why they name some restaurants and producers, and not others. The CDC stuck with "Restaurant Chain A" for the October 2011 salmonella outbreak even though Oklahoma had disclosed half the victims had eaten at Taco Bell.

"If Taco Bell keeps making people sick with lettuce, I want to know it’s Taco Bell," he said. "How bright are they in choosing their lettuce suppliers?"
Taco Bell did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Cronquist said Colorado tries to strike a balance. If the public is still at risk from food, companies are identified. But the state also needs compliance from various facilities while it investigates. Moreover, victim interviews can be skewed by early disclosure; if they have heard "Taco Bell" or "green onions," it can bias their answers.

Sushi eaters face their own pink slime

Amy likes the sushi. I can’t stand the stuff.

As part of that Salmonella-in-sushi outbreak that has now caused 116 confirmed illnesses, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control yesterday fingered the culprit: frozen raw yellowfin tuna product, known as Nakaochi Scrape, from Moon Marine USA Corporation.

Nakaochi Scrape is tuna backmeat that is scraped from the bones of tuna and may be used in sushi, sashimi, ceviche, and similar dishes. The product looks like raw ground tuna. Often it’s sold as spicy tuna sushi. The raw yellowfin tuna product may have passed through several distributors before reaching the restaurant and grocery market and may not be clearly labeled.

Did you know that’s what you may be getting when you get your fancy pants sushi? Amy didn’t.

I tried to explain to Amy and dozens of reporters over the past few days, why it’s sometimes a good idea to use technology to get whatever protein is available from whatever source: but a McRib isn’t actually a rib; it’s the scrapped and gathered pieces of pork mixed with secret spices and formed into a familiar shape of deliciousness to not scare people off; sorta like how religious deities appear. Same with a lot of chicken thingies. And many have now heard of pink slime.

But sushi is for the refined crowd, who don’t lower themselves to other proteinly indulgences. At least that’s what foodies tell me.

Kill steps to control dangerous bacteria are important. So is consumer choice and buyer beware. I’m going to visit my fish monger later today. The muddies are ripe, and the barramundi are plentiful.

Pensioner dies in N. Ireland listeria outbreak

Maybe the meal-planner geniuses decided it would be OK to give sick old folks cold-cuts or deli meat to eat. That’s part of what happened in Canada in 2008 when 23 people – elderly with pre-existing medical conditions, many already in institutions — died from listeria-laden Maple Leaf deli meats.

Yesterday, an elderly patient died in an outbreak of listeria in two Northern Ireland hospitals.

The pensioner was one of two patients in the Antrim Area Hospital that contracted the foodborne bacteria. Another acquired the bug in the Causeway Hospital on the region’s north coast.

The patient who died was already ill but listeria has been confirmed as a contributory cause of death.

Both hospitals are managed by the Northern Trust, which has declared an outbreak.

2 kids with kidney failure in Oregon; raw milk off the rails

More details from the Oregon E. coli O157:H7 raw milk outbreak.

Lynne Terry of The Oregonian writes the latest outbreak associated with raw milk has put a toddler and two young teens from the Portland metro area in the hospital with E. coli poisoning, two with kidney failure.

A fourth child — also under 15 — fell ill but was not hospitalized.

Officials from Oregon Public Health said Friday the children consumed raw milk from Foundation Farm, a family run operation in Wilsonville. At least seven other people who drank the farm’s raw milk — adults and children — have developed either diarrhea or bloody diarrhea, a sign of E. coli O157:H7.

The outbreak could grow. Foundation Farm, which agreed to stop production, sold raw milk to 48 families in Multnomah, Clackamas and Washington counties through a herd-sharing program. By Friday afternoon, state epidemiologists had only interviewed about half of them.

Dr. Katrina Hedberg, state epidemiologist, said anyone with the farm’s raw milk or products made from the milk should throw them out.

A total of 20 states nationwide ban the sale of raw milk and 13 restrict sales. Oregon allows retail distribution of raw goat’s milk but not raw cow or sheep’s milk, which can only be sold directly to consumers at farms with no more than two producing cows and a maximum of nine producing sheep.

Foundation Farm has four cows, three that are lactating. But the farm is not breaking the law because herd-sharing programs are not regulated, said Bruce Pokarney, spokesman for the Oregon Department of Agriculture.

"There is no sale going on technically," he said. "The people who have
shares of the herd own the cows. That milk is their milk. It’s as if they are living on the farm."

The company is owned by Bradley Salyers, according to a filing with the Oregon Secretary of State. The company took down its website, and Salyers could not be reached Friday for comment.

"There are laws that prohibit the retail sale (of raw milk) because this is not a safe product," Hedberg said. "People think there is a controversy. There is no controversy. People routinely used to get sick from raw milk."

An updated table of raw milk related outbreaks is available at http://bites.ksu.edu/rawmilk.

More raw milk, more kids sick; 3 ill in Oregon

Oregon health officials say three children under the age of 15 have been hospitalized with E. coli linked to raw milk from a small farm in Clackamas County.

The state Public Health Division said Friday that Foundation Farm has voluntarily stopped distributing milk.

Officials say lab tests confirm that a fourth child also has E. coli but has not been hospitalized. Health officials say other customers of the dairy are reporting recent diarrhea and other symptoms typical of the bacteria.

Grocery stores cannot sell raw, unpasteurized cow’s milk in Oregon. Officials say Foundation Farm distributed to 48 households that were part of a "herd share" — an arrangement in which people own one or more animals from a herd.

A table of raw milk related outbreaks is available at: http://bites.ksu.edu/rawmilk.

9 sick in Missouri, 2 kids in hospital, but raw milk faithful rally to the cause

Food to many is an evangelical calling.

Some find faith in monotheism, some in nature, some in the sports shrine (I prefer ice hockey, especially now that the playoffs have started and the cathedral once known as Maple-Leaf-Gardens-whatever-the-corporate-home-of-Toronto’s-disgrace-is-now is out of the theological debate), and some in the kitchen.

For some faiths, like creationism, biology don’t matter much.

So the headline in today’s St. Louis Post-Dispatch, harking to centuries of food hucksterism, is not surprising: “Illnesses don’t dissuade raw milk fans.”

“Raw milk enthusiasts say an E. coli outbreak in Missouri won’t change their preference for unpasteurized dairy products.

“At least nine people in five counties in central and western Missouri have been sickened by E. coli since late March. Health officials have pointed to raw milk as a possible cause in at least four of the cases, including a 2-year-old from Columbia who remains hospitalized with severe complications.

“MooGrass Farms near Collinsville sells about 200 gallons of raw cow, goat and sheep milk each week, mostly to families from the St. Louis area, said the farm’s manager, Kevin Kosiek.

“His customers appreciate the taste of whole raw milk as well as the lack of heat processing that kills some of the nutrients.

"This is not a fad," Kosiek said. "People are going back to where people used to get their food, and that’s farmers doing natural, organic things."

“Kosiek and several other raw milk distributors said they doubt the E. coli outbreak will be ultimately linked to unpasteurized dairy products.”

Faith and biology don’t have to conflict. Facts are important, but never enough. It’s a religious thing.

A table of raw milk related outbreaks is available at: http://bites.ksu.edu/rawmilk.

Dirty conditions at another egg producer

In conditions similar to the Iowa egg farms involved in the 2010 salmonella-in-eggs outbreak – without the salmonella outbreak – the Humane Society of the U.S. plans to release on Thursday the results of an undercover investigation into Kreider Farms, which produces 4.5 million eggs each day for supermarkets like ShopRite.

Nicholas Kristof writes in today’s N.Y. Times that he’s reviewed footage and photos taken by the investigator, who says he worked for Kreider between January and March of this year. In an interview, he portrayed an operation that has little concern for cleanliness or the welfare of hens.

“It’s physically hard to breathe because of the ammonia” rising from manure pits below older barns, said the investigator, who would not allow his name to be used because that would prevent him from taking another undercover job in agriculture. He said that when workers needed to enter an older barn, they would first open doors and rev up exhaust fans, and then rush in to do their chores before the fumes became overwhelming.

Mice sometimes ran down egg conveyer belts, barns were thick with flies and manure in three barns tested positive for salmonella, he said. (Actually, salmonella isn’t as rare as you might think, turning up in 3 percent of egg factory farms tested by the Food and Drug Administration last year.)

In some cases, 11 hens were jammed into a cage about 2 feet by 2 feet. The Humane Society says that that is even more cramped than the egg industry’s own voluntary standards — which have been widely criticized as inadequate.

“These allegations by the Humane Society are a gross distortion of Kreider Farms, our employees and the way we care for birds,” Ron Kreider, the president of Kreider Farms, told me in a statement. He acknowledged that three barns had tested positive for salmonella but said that consumers were never endangered.

“The reality of food processing can be off-putting to those not familiar with animal agriculture,” added Kreider, the third-generation family leader of the company. “When dealing with millions of birds, there is always a small percentage of dead birds. Older-style chicken houses will inherently contain a level of fly and rodent activity.” Kreider added that his company was leading the industry in replacing old barns with state-of-the-art.

7 now sick from E. coli linked to raw milk in Missouri

Two more cases of E. coli in central Missouri were confirmed Tuesday, bringing the total to seven people in the area who have recently been sickened by the same bacterial strain, state health officials said.

The patients include a 2-year-old from Boone County who is hospitalized with complications from the infection; a 17-month-old has also developed life-threatening complications affecting the kidneys. The other patients are all adults, health officials said.

Farmers’ market in Hawaii requires food safety audits for vendors; different from ‘trust us.’

While regulations provide uniformity of the minimum acceptable practices. the market usually dictates further supplier requirements. Literally if you sell at the Saturday Diamond Head farmers’ market in Oahu. According to KITV, market organizers have started to require that vendors have some sort of verification that they are doing some risk reduction – or at least that they have food safety plans and an auditor has seen a snapshot of the plan in action.

Changes are coming to the Diamond Head Saturday farmers market, which is considered the flagship of Oahu’s farmers markets.
A mix of local produce, flowers and food venders is the draw.But, the Farm Bureau says it is anticipating stricter federal requirements.  Its landlord, Kapiolani Community College, wants to restrict farmers to those who are safety certified.
"It is a mandate.  It is part of their contract.  It’s a liability issue overall, so I understand it, but it’s sooner than I expected," said Dean Okimoto, of the Hawaii Farm Bureau.

Okimoto expects to lose about two farms on its vendor list.
But, for organizers of three other smaller markets — Ala Moana, Haleiwa and Hawaii Kai — it’s another story. They agree on the need for food safety, but they are more worried about a bill that Hawaii lawmakers are considering than the looming federal laws.

They believe requiring all market farmers to be certified would drive up costs and put farmers out of business. "We have a handful of farmers who have gone through the process and stopped, because they couldn’t keep their prices competitive because of the paperwork." said Annie Suite, who along with Pamela Boyer, operate three Oahu markets at Ala Moana Shopping Center, Haleiwa and Hawaii Kai.
"A lot of the farmers will stop farming.  Our immigrant farmers will not be able to do this.  And the thing is we now have a lot of young farmers coming up in their 20s and 30s and we don’t want to discourage them," said Boyer.

KCC and the Farm Bureau may be using food safety as a branding and marketing tool, but some question why it’s not being applied fairly across the board.

"The food vendors do not have to be certified, which is kind of crazy. If you have been to our farmers market, there are more food vendors serving meals than there are farmers," said Glenn Martinez of Olomana Farms (my guess is that the food vendors are regulated by the health department according to the Food Code -ben).

Over the past couple of years one of my graduate students, Allison Smathers, has been working with farmers’ markets in North Carolina to develop and evaluate food safety workshops for market vendors and managers.

Market managers, vendors and organizers have been part of the process from the start. But creating and delivering this training doesn’t mean that practices are impacted. Recognizing the need to measure behavior change (and the limitations of relying on self-reported tests), Allison has enlisted the help of a group of secret shoppers who have collected data on current practices and facilities and provided insight into specific areas to focus on. Stuff the shoppers saw, like improper handwashing, cross-contaminating samples and not monitoring temperatures have been the big focus.

Earlier this year we delivered the curriculum to 70 extension agents who have begun training vendors and managers in the best practices.
We haven’t encountered any markets requiring audits or we do know of a couple of sites that require some sort of GAPs trainings for their vendors, and some managers may require the training Allison has developed in the future.

The secret shoppers will be back out this summer looking again for food safety practices at markets where vendors and managers have been trained – something Allison can compare to what was seen in previous summers. 2010 data was presented at the 2011 IFT annual meeting.
 

Blessed are the cheesemakers who don’t include listeria

A Washington state cheese processor and distributor has agreed to keep its products off the market until they are proven safe for consumption as part of a consent decree of permanent injunction with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Del Bueno, of Grandview, Wash., which processes a variety of cheeses and distributes them to specialty grocery stores and restaurants, and owner Jesus Rodriguez, agreed to terms of the consent decree entered by U.S. District Judge Lonny R. Suko of the Eastern District of Washington, on April 3.

Under the consent decree, Del Bueno cannot process or distribute food until it demonstrates that it has developed a control program to eliminate Listeria monocytogenes from its production facility and products.

Del Bueno must, among other actions, hire an independent laboratory to collect and analyze samples for the presence of Listeria, retain an independent sanitation expert, develop a program to control Listeria for all employees in both English and Spanish, and destroy all food items currently in the facility. Once the company is permitted to resume operations, the FDA may still require the company to recall products or cease production if future violations occur.

“When a company continues to produce food that presents a risk for consumers, the FDA will take action,” said Dara A. Corrigan, the FDA’s associate commissioner for regulatory affairs. “We will not hesitate to protect the public’s health.”

FDA and Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) inspections since 2009 have documented numerous deficiencies in Del Bueno’s processing facility. In addition, FDA laboratory testing since 2010 also found Listeria monocytogenes in Del Bueno’s finished cheese products and in the Del Bueno facility. Both the FDA and the WSDA repeatedly advised Del Bueno and its owner of the unsanitary conditions at the facility.

In 2010, Del Bueno cheese was linked to a case of listeriosis in Washington state. Although no illnesses have been reported in 2012 from Del Bueno products, individuals who have eaten these products and experience any of the symptoms of listeriosis listed above should contact their health care professional.