Popular Calif. deli dealing with aftermath of Salmonella cases

As of Feb. 3, Brent’s Deli on Townsgate Road had a clean bill of health, having passed a Ventura County Environmental Health Department inspection with no violations noted.

brent's.deli.reuben“First and foremost, it is completely safe to dine at Brent’s Deli,” said restaurant owner Marc Hernandez in written correspondence to the Acorn.

But that wasn’t the case last summer, says Stephanie Wehr of Oxnard who ate lunch at Brent’s with her family on Aug. 2 and filed a lawsuit against the restaurant on Jan. 22.

Wehr al- leges Brent’s was negligent in the way it handled food and sanitation and, as a result, she got salmonella poisoning that put her in the hospital.

Wehr’s attorney, Trevor Quirk, said his client, who is a nurse practitioner at UCLA’s Ronald Reagan Medical Center, is hoping for accountability and to raise awareness through the suit.

“It’s sad because it’s a local deli,” Quirk said. “We’re not here trying to hurt businesses, but they didn’t do the right thing and got caught with their hand in the cookie jar and said they weren’t trying to take cookies.”

Citing a state salmonella investigation and county environmental health department inspection reports from July that called attention to the issue, the suit claims “Brent’s . . . knew or should have known the premises . . . was contaminated with salmonella.”

7 dead, 28 sick including a ‘fetal loss’ Listeria in apples, who knew?

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reports, this outbreak appears to be over. However, recalled products may still be in people’s homes. Consumers unaware of the recalls could continue to eat the products and get sick.

apples-granny-smith-165384On January 6, 2015, Bidart Bros. of Bakersfield, California voluntarily recalled Granny Smith and Gala apples because environmental testing revealed contamination with Listeria monocytogenes at the firm’s apple-packing facility.

On January 18, 2015, FDA laboratory analyses using whole genome sequencing (WGS) showed that these Listeria isolates were highly related to the outbreak strains.

Happy Apples, California Snack Foods, and Merb’s Candies each announced a voluntary recall of commercially produced, prepackaged caramel apples.

A total of 35 people infected with the outbreak strains of Listeria monocytogenes were reported from 12 states.

Of these, 34 people were hospitalized. Listeriosis contributed to at least three of the seven deaths reported.

Eleven illnesses were pregnancy-related (occurred in a pregnant woman or her newborn infant), with one illness resulting in a fetal loss (A fetal loss? Who writes this stuff?).

Three invasive illnesses (meningitis) were among otherwise healthy children aged 5–15 years.

Twenty-eight (90%) of the 31 ill people interviewed reported eating commercially produced, prepackaged caramel apples before becoming ill.

The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) identified one case of listeriosis in Canada that is genetically related to the U.S. outbreak.

Don’t worry, exports won’t be harmed: Another mad cow case in Canada

Gotta wonder just how effective Canada’s ban on mammalian protein in ruminant feed is, given the number of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) cases there have been over the past decade.

ITALY-G8-G5-AGRICULTURE-FARMWhen there’s a BSE case, or a foodborne illness outbreak like Listeria in the $5.5 billion a year Maple Leaf Foods, government agencies fall over themselves to assure the public – and trading partners – that everything is fine.

Would the Canadian economy sink were it not for the agricultural behemoths? Probably.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says little more than a week passed from the time the most recent case of mad cow disease was first suspected to when it was confirmed and national trading partners were notified.

A timeline of the case at an Alberta farm has been released on the agency’s website.

The website says a private veterinarian took samples on February 4 at the undisclosed farm and submitted them to a provincial lab.

It says they were tested on February 6 and the lab recorded a “non-negative” test result.

The lab repeated the test the following day with the same finding and reported the case to the CFIA, where the agency conducted its own test in Lethbridge, Alta, to confirm the result.

The CFIA says it started gathering information on the animal’s herd on Tuesday, officially confirmed the case on Wednesday and posted the case to its website and notified Canada’s trading partners on Thursday.

Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz said Friday that the infected animal was not born on the farm where it was discovered.

Ritz also said the discovery won’t affect Canada’s international beef trade because it won’t change the county’s controlled BSE risk status from the World Organization for Animal Health. He said Canada has stayed below international protocols that allow for up to a dozen BSE cases a year.

Oldest person in Europe attributes three raw eggs a day to longevity

We all go, some later than others. I can’t imagine living to 115, or eating three raw eggs a day, but according to a New York Times profile of Emma Morano, she believes her age and egg diet are linked.
 
At 115 years and nearly three months, Ms. Morano is the oldest person in Europe, the fifth oldest in the world and one of only a handful of people whose lives have straddled three centuries.ITALY-articleLarge
 
In her time, she has watched Italy evolve from a monarchy to a republic that spawned nearly 70 governments in seven decades, with a 20-year foray into Fascism in the middle. She survived two world wars, and the hardship of their aftermath; years of domestic terrorism, and years of economic prosperity that transformed Italy from an agrarian economy to one of the world’s most industrialized nations.
 
Ms. Morano has no doubts about how she made it this long: Her elixir for longevity consists of raw eggs, which she has been eating — three per day — since her teens when a doctor recommended them to counter anemia. Assuming she has been true to her word, Ms. Morano would have consumed around 100,000 eggs in her lifetime, give or take a thousand, cholesterol be damned.
 
She is also convinced that being single for most of her life, after an unhappy marriage that ended in 1938 following the death of an infant son, has kept her kicking. Separation was rare then, and divorce became legal in Italy only in 1970. She said she had plenty of suitors after that, but never chose another partner.
Assuming the prevalence of Salmonella in Italian eggs is the same as the U.S. (and Italy has had their share of outbreaks linked to eggs), Ms. Marano probably has been exposed to the pathogen 5-10 times.

More cases expected in Australian frozen berry hepatitis A outbreak

Berries are a staple of my diet; I go through about 2 lbs a week of raspberries, blackberries and strawberries. When the fresh berries are too expensive (or don’t look good) I substitute with frozen ones – and often cook them before eating after the multiple noro and hep A outbreaks in the past few years.
According to ABC (the Australian one), another illness in New South Wales has been linked to Nanna’s frozen mixed berries, bringing the number of outbreak cases up to five.
 
A second case of hepatitis A linked to Nanna’s frozen mixed berries has been confirmed in New South Wales.6099244-3x2-340x227
 
It follows the identification of three cases in Victoria linked to the same product.
 
The NSW Health department has issued a warning urging consumers not to eat the product with best-before dates up to and including November 22, 2016.
 
The department said it was not sure how many others may be affected given the berries are widely distributed and the potential for people to develop the disease in the coming weeks.
 
Dr Vicky Sheppeard from NSW Health’s Communicable Diseases Branch said there were concerns because hepatitis-A was contagious.
 
“So far we’ve had two people that have confirmed hepatitis A, that in the weeks to months before they developed hepatitis A had consumed these berries and they’re coming from different parts of the state, so we’re concerned this might be a more widespread problem,” said Dr Sheppeard.
 
Dr Sheppeard said NSW Health were expecting more cases to arise.
 
“The incubation period for hepatitis A is between two and seven weeks, so at this stage it’s an early stage of the investigation and we’re still gathering information about how much of the product is in NSW homes but potentially we will be seeing more cases in the coming weeks,” said Dr Sheppeard.

I prefer the 4 Rs for risk comm: Rapid reliable relevant repeated; big data in food safety and quality

What is big data? No matter what definition is used, the term “big data” is most simply and best described by the sheer volume of data involved, which can offer the opportunity for increased insight and better decision-making that could not be accomplished by analyzing smaller data sets. Nonetheless, to uncover underlying trends, correlations, and relationships that would typically be absent from one-dimensional data alone, the analysis and management of huge data sets demand consideration of several other important aspects of big data.

big.dataIBM describes big data by four key aspects: 1) the volume of data, 2) the speed at which data is generated, 3) the aggregation of distinctly different data types, and 4) the validity and security of data. These aspects are known as the four Vs: volume, velocity, variety, and veracity (IMB, 2014).

Big data has required the development of new non-relational database structures capable of handling unstructured data, computational algorithms that can effectively use all dimensions of big data, and parallel and cloud computing infrastructure to enable fast processing and sharing of data. According to the McKinsey Global Institute, the use of big data could revolutionize and create value across all sectors of the global economy, save the United States $300 billion annually in healthcare costs, and increase operating margins for retailers by 60% (Manyika et al., 2011). Furthermore, free or low-cost sources of unstructured data, such as word searches on Internet engines and online discussion sites, may provide near real-time information on disease outbreaks.

Despite its potential, big data remains vulnerable to traditional data-analysis challenges such as sampling error and bias, the failure to correct significance levels for multiple comparisons, and the correlation-causation inference that is characteristic of working with retrospective data. Nevertheless, development and implementation of tools that use big data in food safety have considerable potential to improve microbial food safety and quality.

Similar to other areas, the amount of food safety-related data being generated by the government, industry, and academia is increasing rapidly. While specific information on the amount of data being generated is often not easily accessible, the use of big data is very apparent in routine subtyping of foodborne pathogens. Techniques that interrogated only a small proportion of bacterial genomes (e.g., pulse field gel electrophoresis) are being replaced by whole genome sequencing (WGS), which provides information on each of the approximately three to six million nucleotides that make up typical bacterial foodborne pathogen genomes. For example, the private-public partnership 100K Foodborne Pathogen Genome Project aims to sequence 100,000 foodborne pathogen genomes. Similarly, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service as well as public health agencies in other countries have begun routinely sequencing foodborne pathogen isolates. For example, since fall 2013 all human clinical Listeria monocytogenes isolates obtained in the United States are subjected to WGS by either state or federal public health agencies. In addition to the large data sets that are being generated specifically for food safety applications, food safety professionals increasingly recognize the value of using larger data sets that are not specifically for food safety applications. For example, the use of geographical information systems technology (GIS) and geo-referenced data for predicting or identifying pre-harvest food safety hazards (particularly in the produce area) shows considerable potential to yield new science-based approaches to food safety hazards. The food industry collects large data sets, often through real-time monitoring, that could be used in more in-depth analyses along with other data sets to improve food safety and optimize food safety investments. This article highlights a few examples of how big data can be used to develop and implement improved food safety practices and how big data could help food safety professionals make better decisions.

armadillo.hatGIS is a computer-based tool for mapping and analyzing things on earth. The technology integrates common database operations, such as query and statistical analysis, with the visualization and geographic analysis offered by maps. With regard to food safety, GIS combines information on geographical features and attribute data (i.e., characteristics/information related to a specific location) to identify associations between the environment and a pathogen. The first application of geographic analysis was in 1854 when Dr. John Snow, a London physician recognized as one of the pioneers of modern GIS and epidemiology, mapped the location of cholera deaths and water wells. He used maps along with personal interview data to identify the source of the disease: the Broad Street water pump.

Today, GIS is applied to predict the spatial and temporal occurrence of foodborne pathogen contamination in produce production environments. Furthermore, GIS has aided growers to understand the transmission dynamics of foodborne pathogens in the environment as well as various spatial-temporal factors (e.g., climate trends, proximity to landscape features, soil properties) that influence the potential for produce contamination events. The ultimate goal is to prioritize risks on farms and to develop a preventive approach to pre-harvest food safety. The application of GIS in produce food safety has shown incredible promise, such as helping growers make more informed decisions about field practices and develop targeted pathogen-surveillance programs. For example, the FDA and National Aeronautics and Space Administration have collaborated to develop GIS-Risk, a program that links GIS data with predictive risk-assessment modes to forecast when, where, and under what conditions microbial contamination of crops is likely to lead to human illness (Oryang et al., 2014). Furthermore, Strawn and others (2013) used a GIS framework to predict spatial locations of L. monocytogenes reservoirs based on proximity to various landscape features and level of soil moisture in the produce production environments of the State of New York. They showed field locations near impervious land cover class had a predicted L. monocytogenes prevalence of 20% while field locations away from impervious land cover class had a predicted L. monocytogenes prevalence of only 5%. Growers can therefore identify locations on farms that are at high risk for contamination and implement intervention measures to minimize the risk of transfer to produce (see Figure 2). Additionally, researchers observed that the incidence of Escherichia coli O157:H7 increased significantly after heavy rains in a California produce growing region (Cooley et al., 2007). This finding suggested that during intense weather and subsequent flooding events, pathogen levels in the environment may be elevated. Therefore, monitoring data on rainfall totals or river flow rates may aid growers in forecasting risk of potential contamination events.

Overall, the application of GIS to produce safety research has generated massive amounts of new data on the ecology of different organisms in the environment and data on various spatial-temporal-based scenarios that influence the likelihood of contamination events. In this big data driven era, GIS is one tool that helps researchers store, capture, process, analyze, and visualize large datasets. While the promise of GIS to complex food safety issues is being demonstrated, further integration of multiple large data sets (e.g., WGS data, real-time data acquired via drones) will be critical to further improve food safety throughout the farm-to-fork continuum. Application of GIS tools to address pre-harvest food safety of plant-based foods will specifically be facilitated by the rapid growth of precision agriculture, which focuses on improving yield and optimizing various production inputs.

The FDA has created, validated, and applied for real-time regulatory use an open-source WGS integrated network of state, federal, and industry partners. The network is known as GenomeTrakr and represents the first distributed genomic food shield for detecting and tracing foodborne pathogen outbreaks back to their sources. WGS information guides investigators to specific food products, plants, and farm sources for pathogen outbreaks, providing valuable insight into the origin of contaminated food. This capability is particularly important because the FDA has a limited number of food inspectors and the U.S. food supply is becoming more global. Sample collection and sequence cataloging from food production sites can help monitor compliance with the FDA’s rules on safe food-handling practices, enhancing preventive controls for food safety. A recent example involved the 2014 suspension of a U.S. producer of a Mexican-style cheese linked to numerous illnesses caused by L. monocytogenes. WGS was employed to confirm the link between the food and facility isolates and those derived from clinical cases. The usefulness of this new technology for source tracking had previously been demonstrated when it provided enough high-resolution micro-evolutionary single nucleotide polymorphism changes to pinpoint the sources and ingredients of a Salmonella outbreak in spiced meats in 2009 and was used to confirm L. monocytogenes persistence for 12 years in a food processing facility.

Big data has the ability to change the conventional strategy for prevention: Historically, food safety professionals have relied on food safety audits or inspections to determine if a food establishment was in compliance with food safety  standards and regulations. However, at best, food safety audits are a snapshot of an establishment’s condition at a single point in time. For example, retail food-inspection results were not a good predictor of whether or not a food  establishment would be linked to or cause an outbreak because of the low frequency of visits, which ranged from once a year to just a few times per year.

One nationwide retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., is leveraging big data for food safety purposes. Wal-Mart utilizes handheld information technology, Bluetooth communication, and state-of-the-art temperature measuring devices to check the internal temperatures of every batch of rotisserie chickens cooked, ensuring a safe internal temperature. In a single period, health inspectors across the country checked rotisserie chicken cooking temperatures in Wal-Mart stores approximately ten times. During the same time frame, a third-party inspection firm checked rotisserie chicken cooking temperatures approximately 100 times, a tenfold increase of the checks during regulatory inspections. However, by leveraging data obtained over this same period of time through an internal handheld self-check system, Wal-Mart recorded 1.4 million internal cooking temperatures of rotisserie chickens. This approach provided much greater insight than what could have been obtained through inspections or audits alone. Leveraging big data and the information it provides appears to be an innovative and effective way to enhance regulatory compliance and track compliance with desired standards.

Big data tools such as metagenomics also increasingly offer new approaches to control and reduce microbial food spoilage. Food spoilage results from complex combinations of microbiological factors and physiochemical factors of the matrix, and the relationships between causative agents and physiochemical changes associated with spoilage are poorly defined. In some foods, such as fresh pork sausage, microbial growth (as measured by traditional methods) and spoilage are even temporally unlinked by as much as 30 days, leading to the suspicion that microbial growth plays only a small role in spoilage. Using large-scale parallel 16S rRNA-based pyrosequencing, researchers described in detail the dramatic changes in abundances of microbial species that occur over the shelf life of a refrigerated model sausage product, effectively resulting in multiple ecological successions of taxa with one wave of microorganisms rising to high abundances and displacing the previous wave (Benson et al., 2014). These successions occurred despite little change in the absolute abundance of the populations detected by traditional plating, illustrating the powerful resolution afforded by metagenomic analysis. The addition of antimicrobials changed the picture dramatically, yielding an essentially static community for the first 30 days of refrigeration, followed by an abrupt decline in relative abundances of nearly the entire population except for a single microorganism. Combining changes in microbiota composition with chemical signatures of the matrix over time further established high degrees of correlation between abundances of specific taxa and significant changes in the chemical composition of the sausage, providing a list of possible taxa as major causes of the onset of spoilage. Detailed trace-back analyses comparing the distributions of specific taxa from ingredients and final product also identified the ingredients, specifically the spice blend, as a major source of the most abundant taxon in the spoiled product. Importantly, it was the combination of high-resolution microbiota data and traditional plating data that enabled a full  understanding of the ecosystem behavior to reduce the likelihood of spoilage, thus enhancing the quality of the product.

Opportunities for big data applications in food safety and microbial spoilage beyond the ones detailed in this article appear to be abundant, yet food scientists and food microbiologists have used only a small amount of the relevant data generated and available. Hence, there is a considerable need for a comprehensive multidisciplinary approach across industry, government, and academia to develop the people, tools, and infrastructure to facilitate application of big data in food science. The challenges on this path are multifaceted and range from the rather mundane, such as switching from paper-based to electronic-based record-keeping schemes, to the complex, such as implementation of computational tools that can integrate and analyze structured and unstructured data (e.g., video, satellite images, audio) to reveal food-safety-relevant associations. An important next step will be to create data that show that analyses of big data can also successfully predict future microbial food safety and quality outcomes. In addition, there is an urgent need to train future food sdafety professionals and food scientists to use and analyze big data sets and interact successfully with data scientists. The ultimate creation of a big data culture in the food industry can facilitate considerable advancements in food safety, food quality, and sustainability.

Laura K. Strawn, Eric W. Brown, Jairus R. D. David, Henk C. den Bakker, Pajau Vangay, Frank Yiannas, and Martin Wiedmann

http://www.ift.org/food-technology/past-issues/2015/february/features/big-data-in-food-safety-and-quality.aspx#.VNqCEOzLe7R.twitter

Modeling Listeria in leafy greens using micro and big data

I’m not sure what big data means, but it’s a catchy soundbite that is showing up more routinely.

lettuce.skull.noroProf. Martin Wiedmann, food science and technology, has combined the fields of microbiology and big data to better predict disease outbreaks and preserve food safety.

Wiedmann conducted a study focused on Listeria monocytogenes bacteria and related Listeria species — a leading cause of foodborne illnesses and deaths.

“The main goal of the study was to find better ways to determine whether lettuce or similar produce grown in a field are likely to have bacteria on them that could make you sick if you eat the product,” Wiedmann said.

According to Wiedmann, there are about 1,600 cases of Listeriosis annually in the United States, with more than 20 percent of those infections resulting in death.

“It is definitely not your middle-of-the-road food poisoning disease, which makes [Listeria] so important to understand and study,” Wiedmann said.

Normally, raw and unprocessed foods will be preserved with refrigeration or salting to prevent bacterial growth. Listeria can grow under refrigeration temperatures and high salt environments, thus making these typical methods ineffective at killing off the bacteria.

Products that are taken directly from growing conditions and consumed are high risk produce. They are the foods most likely to transmit foodborne pathogens — unless necessary precautions are taken.

“Therefore, it is necessary to make sure the product is safe and free of these pathogens while it is still in the field,” Wiedmann said.

Wiedmann and colleagues collected many samples from various farms in upstate New York.

“In addition to isolating Listeria species from the sample, we also collected Geographic Information System data (GIS), which records the exact location of where the sample was collected,” Wiedmann said. “With this, we can ask questions such as how close was Sample A to water or to a major road?”

Wiedmann uses the data to understand the factors that are conducive to Listeria growth.

Analysis of the data revealed that proximity to water is a major factor of a high risk Listeria presence.

“The analysis of the data allows us to predict high and low risk areas for Listeria and also see whether different types of the bacteria behave differently,” Wiedmann said.

He has also started working on collecting data for Salmonella and Escherichia coli, two other very important foodborne pathogens. According to Wiedmann, the next steps will be to analyze different states and regions in conjunction with different pathogen species to better understand food production and the pathogens that afflict it.

Residents spot rodents in restaurant at mall in Dubai

Everyone’s got a video camera these days, and they like to use them.

rat.restaurant.dubai.feb.15Pictures have emerged of rodents running loose in a restaurant located right outside a popular mall in Dubai.

Passersby have clicked pictures of rats running on food containers and have posted them on the social media, enraging many and some vowing never to eat at the venue.

One resident took on the social media and complained that he got sick after eating at that particular place.

The restaurant did not respond to emails sent by this website. However, master developer Nakheel, the operator of Ibn Battuta Mall, was quick to confirm that it is aware of the issue and has already taken action.

rat.restaurant.dubai.2.15“We are aware of this issue and have taken immediate action to rectify the situation, including alerting the appropriate authorities,” a Nakheel spokesperson told Emirates 24|7.

“This restaurant is a standalone establishment located outside the mall itself, and, under the terms and conditions of its contract, is responsible for its own health, safety and hygiene management. As mall operator, our role is to ensure that such obligations are met,” the Nakheel spokesperson added.

NZ woman fined $1125 over home-kill meat

A Whangarei bakery manager has been fined after being convicted of buying unregulated home-kill meat she intended to use in produce sold across the counter.

meatIn Whangarei District Court on Monday Sok Heng Chhiv, 30, pleaded guilty to a charge of buying unregulated meat, which had not been processed in accordance with the Animal Products Act. The charge was laid by the Ministry for Primary Industries and Chhiv was fined $1125 and the unregulated meat was forfeited.

She had bought the meat from Whangarei homekill operator Arron Ogle, 40, director of Homekill Services, who was last month convicted of selling 71.7kg of unregulated meat and fined $2250.

The court heard on Monday that May 21, last year, an MPI animal products officer inspected Whau Valley Hot Bread Shop in Whangarei, then jointly owned and managed by Chhiv and her husband.

The officer found 71.7kg of beef that Chhiv had no receipts for. Meat for human consumption must be documented throughout the food chain so it can be traced back to its farm of origin should there be a health or hygiene issue.

Chhiv said she had bought 60kg of diced beef and 11.7kg of beef fillet and rump steak for $500 from “Aaron” the previous day. She said she had not bought meat from “Aaron” before, but did so because it was cheaper than the butcher and good quality. She said “Aaron” was a home-kill operator, but did not know it was illegal to buy meat from this source.

Organic garlic powder recalled because of Salmonella risk

Vitamin Cottage Natural Food Markets, Inc., a Lakewood, Colorado-based natural grocery chain, is recalling two lots of Natural Grocers brand Organic Garlic Powder as the product has the potential to be contaminated with Salmonella. Consumption of products containing Salmonella can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems.

natural.grocers.garlic.powderHealthy persons infected with Salmonella often experience fever, diarrhea (which may be bloody), nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. In rare circumstances, infection with Salmonella can result in the organism getting into the bloodstream and producing more severe illnesses such as arterial infections (i.e., infected aneurysms) endocarditic and arthritis.

This recall was initiated after being notified of positive Salmonella findings in product sampled by the FDA.

The recalled product is packaged in clear plastic bags with Natural Grocers label notating Julian pack on dates and pricing per pound. The product was produced in size ranges of 0.25 pound to 0.30 pound. The lots being recalled are identified by Julian packed on date and include: 351-14 and 006-15

The product was distributed to Natural Grocers’ 92 stores located in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. Consumers can find the specific locations of Natural Grocers stores at: http://www.naturalgrocers.com/store-locations.

Only packages bearing the Julian packed on dates listed above are subject to recall.

To date the company has received no reports of illness. Consumers who may have purchased this product should return it to the store for credit or refund.