13 dead: Listeria found in another Danish workplace

Another sandwich meat producer has been hit by the Listeria outbreak that has now claimed 13 lives in Denmark. The food product authorities Fødevarestyrelsen ordered the Delika plant near Hammel to close its doors – for 24 hours – so that cutting equipment and other listeriaequipment that came into contact with contaminated ‘rullepølse’ sandwich meat, which originated from Jørn A Rullepølser in Hedehusene near Copenhagen, can be thoroughly cleaned.

 “Delika Hammel wants to protect our customers and eliminate any possible risk,” the company said in a statement.

A wide range of Delika products were pulled from the shelves of shops last week. The meats were cut on machines that had been in contact with the infected products from Jørn A Rullepølser, and authorities feared cross-contamination could have occurred.

More than Canada would admit: Denmark says ‘serious errors’ in handling of Listeria outbreak with 12 dead, another 12 sick

Denmark’s food safety watchdog made “serious mistakes” in its handling of a listeria outbreak linked to the death of 12 people, the country’s government has said.

ITALY-G8-G5-AGRICULTURE-FARMFood minister, Dan Jørgensen, has blasted the food authorities, Fødevarestyrelsen, over its handling of the Listeria outbreak that has claimed the lives of 12 people in Denmark over the past year.

A Fødevarestyrelsen report has showed there were serious errors in its handling of the case and concluded that it should have carried out its investigation into the source of the outbreak, Jørn A Rullepølser, more quickly and effectively.

“When it is proved there is a direct connection between the food products and deaths, the authorities should immediately launch a thorough investigation of the specific company,” Jørgensen said in a press release. “That hasn’t happened quickly enough, which is lamentable.”

Danish food minister wants answers in Listeria case

The Copenhagen Post reports that food minister, Dan Jørgensen, has announced that he wants an explanation regarding the listeria outbreak that has claimed 12 lives in Denmark since September 2013.

rullepølseYesterday, the food product authorities Fødevarestyrelsen closed down the suspected supplier of the bad sandwich meat responsible for the infection, Jørn A Rullepølser, but now it has emerged that Listeria was first found in the company’s products in May.

Three weeks after the May findings, Jørn A Rullepølser was cleared, despite the fact that five people at the time had been infected with the bacteria.

12 dead, 8 sick from Listeria in Denmark

Since September last year, 12 people have died of Listeria and a further eight have been infected after consuming ‘rullepølse’ sandwich meat.

rullepølseThe food product authorities Fødevarestyrelsen suspect that the bad meat originated from Jørn A Rullepølser in Hedehusene near Copenhagen and have closed down the producer.

The 20 infected patients consist of eleven women and nine men all aged 43-89 and all hailing from various parts of Denmark, according to the national serum institute Statens Seruminstitut.

“From September 2013 until today, 20 patients have been registered suffering from listeriosis, which is an aspect of the outbreak,” Statens Seruminstitut wrote in a press release.

“Most cases have however occurred recently. In June, July, and August, 15 cases have been registered alone.”

Similar to previous cases, the 12 people who died also suffered from other serious illnesses and their deaths cannot completely be attributed to a listeria infection, Statens Seruminstitut stated.

Uh-huh; Salmonella cases are not associated with Danish broiler meat

The number of Danes who contracted a Salmonella infection reached a historic low level in 2013. More than half of those infected became ill during a trip abroad. For the third year in a row no salmonella cases were linked to Danish broiler meat. These are some of the findings n.kiergegaard.quotepresented in the annual report on the occurrence of diseases that can be transmitted from animals and food to humans. The report was prepared by the Zoonosis Centre at the National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark, in cooperation with Statens Serum Institut, one of Denmark’s largest research institutions in the health sector, and the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration.

In 2013 a total of 1,136 salmonella infections were reported among Danes. This is the lowest number since action plans to combat salmonella were introduced in the 1990s, and is equivalent to 20.3 infected cases per 100,000 inhabitants. More than half of the sick had contracted salmonella during a trip abroad.

Most of those who returned home with a travel-related infection had been to Turkey (31%), where a major outbreak of Salmonella Enteritidis occurred in 2013. There were also many cases of salmonella among travellers to Thailand (13%), Egypt (8%) and Spain (6%).

Soren-Kierkegaard-Quotes-1According to the 2013 source account no cases of salmonella were attributed to Danish broiler meat.

“Denmark has been a pioneer when it comes to combatting salmonella in broiler meat and eggs. When we look at the figures from the last three years, it is quite evident that the joint efforts of producers, authorities and researchers to make Danish broiler meat salmonella-free have paid off ,” National Food Institute senior academic officer Birgitte Helwigh explains.

Why I don’t eat sushi: What consumers expect from food control and what they get – A case study of the microbial quality of sushi bars in Denmark

Sushi is a traditional Japanese food, also popular in Europe, consisting of acidified rice and raw fish. This study investigated the correlation between monitoring of hygienic levels and compliance with establishment-managed controls by public food inspectors and observed microbial levels of two types of sushi products, Maki salmon and Nigeri salmon, sold by Danish outlets.

sushi denmarkDanish consumers’ knowledge of the specific tests carried out by food inspectors was also examined. The total microbial contents of the products ranged from 4.1 to 7.5 log CFU/g and contents of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus spp. ranged from <1 to 2.3 and <2 to 3.0 log CFU/g, respectively. There was in general no correlation between the publicly accessible rankings by the food inspectors and the microbiological contents of the products. Underlying reasons might be that the regulatory monitoring of compliance with control programs does not readily include two important parameters, personal hygiene and initial microbial quality of products. Microbiological examination of sushi products does not constitute a part of routine monitoring of hygienic levels, a fact that by use of a questionnaire study was found not to be widely known among consumers.

Food Control, Volume 45, November 2014, Pages 76–80

J.J. Leisner, T.B. Lund, E.A. Frandsen, N.B.E. Andersen, L. Fredslund, V.P.T. Nguyen, T. Kristiansen

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0956713514002126

Marketing food safety at retail: what USDA can learn from Denmark about eliminating salmonella in poultry

I have a soft spot for the Danes, with their schnapps and pickled herring and home builders and existentialist philosophers (daughter Sorenne, get it?)

Lynne Terry of The Oregonian, who has doggedly followed the Foster Farms Salmonella outbreak, writes that the company issued an apology, aquvitbolstered food safety measures, but people kept getting sick, with nearly 500 illnesses to date.

Foster Farms did not issue a recall, and the USDA did not press for one. Officials said they lack authority to ban salmonella on raw chicken. They said the bacteria were “naturally occurring” in healthy chickens and that all the public had to do was follow good hygiene in the kitchen and cook poultry thoroughly. They also said it would be impossible to get rid of salmonella in poultry.

While reporting on this story, the late William Keene, senior epidemiologist at Oregon Public Health, told me that Denmark had done just that. Talk to a food safety specialist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Keene said. He’s Danish. He’ll tell you.

In the first installment, Terry quotes  Birgitte Helwigh, senior scientist at the National Food Institute of the Technical University of Denmark, as saying, “In Denmark, we have zero tolerance for salmonella in chicken meat.”

That policy has reaped enormous benefits for consumers, Helwigh said, and saved millions of dollars in medical expenses. Health authorities have not identified any human cases of salmonella poisoning due to Danish chicken meat since 2011 and they estimate there has only been about a dozen illnesses from

Denmark was jolted into battle by a surge of sickness. From the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s, the country averaged about 450 confirmed kierkegaardsalmonella cases a year in a population of 5 million. But in 1977 the number of illnesses started to climb, spiking at nearly 3,500 in 1988.

Scientists pinpointed broiler meat as the culprit. Reporters latched onto the story, consumers became alarmed and the industry grew worried.

“They realized they had a salmonella problem,” said Henrik Wegener, former director of the National Food Institute and now provost of the Technical University. “They also assumed they could do something to solve it.”

No one knows exactly what caused the uptick. Bacteria can mutate and become more virulent. The Danish poultry industry had also changed. Once a scattering of small farms, companies merged and the industry became more centralized, with owners obtaining flocks from the same source.

If those flocks were contaminated, so were the chicks. Bigger chicken houses also increased the chance for contamination. The bacteria, which can live in the intestines of healthy chickens, are spread among birds through feces. If the intestines are nicked during slaughter, the meat becomes contaminated.

Industry turns to testing

In 1989, the Danish poultry industry adopted the first voluntary control measures that were tweaked and tightened over time, eventually becoming mandatory.

The first voluntary step involved testing broiler flocks for salmonella three weeks before slaughter. Testing each bird would have been far too expensive so the Danes collected fecal samples and tested them for bacteria.

If the test was positive, the whole flock was butchered late in the day in an area reserved in the slaughterhouse for contaminated birds.

The testing reduced human illnesses but not enough to satisfy health officials, scientists or industry.

Farmers, especially, were disappointed by the results, Wegener said.

“They spent quite a lot of money on testing and controls but we really didn’t get to the bottom of the problem,” Wegener said.

With processors and farms struggling amid uneven results, in 1993 the largest Danish grocery retail chain stepped in with an ultimatum: Co-op Denmark told suppliers that it would not buy their chicken meat if they did not enact measures to curb salmonella.

The retailer, with nearly 40 percent of the market, told suppliers they had to destroy flocks that had a positive test prior to slaughter. Co-op Denmark also required companies to test a sampling of butchered meat. If any positives popped up, meat from that flock was rejected.

The industry was dismayed by the requirement, said Karin Froidt, Co-op Denmark’s food safety manager.

“They thought it would pass,” Froidt said. “But then we introduced Swedish broiler meat which at the time had a lower incidence of salmonella. They found out we were serious.”

The retailer dangled an incentive, introducing a “salmonella-free” label on raw chicken from companies that complied. That label carried cache with consumers and fetched a higher price.

Danish pork recalled in Sweden for Salmonella

Food giant Axfood AB has been forced to recall two tonnes of pork, following test samples showing salmonella bacteria present in the meat.

The Local reports the pork has been sold all over Sweden, but as of yet there have been no reports of anyone falling ill.

According to Axfood’s press manager Ingmar Kroon, the affected meat is pork imported mainly from Denmark, including chops, marinated loin and mince. The products have been sold by supermarket chains Willys, Hemköp, Prisextraand Tempo.

“We’re recalling it from all over the country, but we don’t know how much has already been sold,” he said to the TT news agency, adding, “but only some of the meat has been infected. …

“It’s happened twice this summer that we’ve had infected meat from Denmark, and that might look bad, but Denmark isn’t bad at handling. I definitely don’t want to point the blame at them.”

I can now blame all my personality traits on toxo; but cats probably aren’t causing Danish women to kill themselves

I’ve got a thing for the Danes.

The kid is named Sorenne.

But a new study in the Archives of General Psychiatry concludes that Danish women infected with the toxoplasmosis parasite were 1.5 times more likely to attempt suicide than their toxo-free counterparts.

Slate reports that when humans get infected—more often from rare meat and unwashed veggies than from cat boxes—the parasite settles into our muscles and brains and stays there, hidden from the immune system in protective cysts. About a third of people in developed countries are toxo carriers. The conventional medical wisdom is that toxo causes a brief mono-like illness in otherwise healthy people and becomes dormant thereafter.

However, a growing body of research suggests that toxo can subtly affect human behavior. Carriers are, then, more likely to try to kill themselves, and nearly three times more likely to die in car accidents.

The effects of toxoplasmosis vary by gender in rats and humans. Infected male rats become markedly more impulsive, females not as much. A series of small studies that compared personality tests in carriers and noncarriers found that men with toxoplasmosis were more “expedient, suspicious, jealous, and dogmatic,” whereas female carriers were warmer and more conscientious.

Surveillance, advance warning not enough; 172 sickened; a long-lasting outbreak of S. Typhimurium U323 associated with several pork products, Denmark, 2010

On March 23, 2010, the national food surveillance system in Denmark reported a steady occurrence of positive isolates of S. Typhimurium, of unknown phage type and resistant to ampicillin, streptomycin and sulphamethoxazole, in samples from mainly pork meat and products.

Researchers from Denmark and Sweden report in Epidemiology and Infection that several isolates originated from a specific pig slaughterhouse A or a closely associated cutting plant. At this point, although no human cases had yet been identified, an investigation was initiated with the focus on food contamination. On 20 April, a total of 14 human cases with the outbreak type had been confirmed.

A case-control study was undertaken to confirm an association between illness in a subgroup of patients and consumption of teewurst or tea sausage, a spreadable sausage made from fresh salted and smoked pork and beef which is fermented but not heat-treated. The producer of the teewurst had received pork from slaughterhouse A during the period that the outbreak strain had been isolated.

Herds delivering pigs to slaughterhouse A were identified by a unique herd identification number given to all animal herds in Denmark.

From March 2010 and onwards, the outbreak strain was identified in a total of 113 samples; four environmental samples from slaughterhouse A and 109 meat
samples, mainly pork, of which 96 were sampled directly at slaughterhouse A or could be traced back there. Positive meat types included mainly minced pork, pork belly, pork loin and loin back ribs.

Investigation of slaughterhouse A showed positive discovery of the outbreak strain in swabs from equipment and meat samples, even after closing down production for thorough cleaning and disinfection. It was concluded that the establishment was most likely contaminated. Repeated cleaning and disinfection was performed and alterations in equipment and procedures were implemented, From the beginning of July, no further positive samples of the outbreak strain were found at slaughterhouse A.

On 8 July, a press statement was issued jointly by the DVFA and SSI, notifying the public about the salmonellosis outbreak and the link to consumption of pork meat from slaughterhouse A. In addition to describing the outbreak investigation and the action taken to control the outbreak, the statement also contained detailed guidelines on how to prevent infection with Salmonella.

A total of 172 cases of S. Typhimurium U323 were reported between March and September 2010 in Denmark demonstrating how a combination of typing Salmonella isolates from farm-to-fork and from the human population can provide early warning of a salmonellosis outbreak. It also highlights the importance of national Salmonella surveillance which allowed identification of the slaughterhouse contamination and provided the COMG with valuable information to initiate investigative measures. In spite of the existence of these systems, tracing pork meat that has entered the production chain still poses a significant challenge. If feasible, adoption of a standardized automated system across the EU, with detailed product and distribution information, for tracing products might prove worthwhile.

Currently, this is not possible in the EU and such systems are only as good as the data provided by the operators. At present, by the time enough evidence has been gathered to issue a product recall, products with a short shelf-life (such as fresh meat) are most likely to have been consumed.

In this outbreak, early warnings from the Salmonella surveillance system were not sufficient to prevent the outbreak from lasting almost 7 months.

State-of-the-art surveillance, typing, epidemiology and food traceback allowed us to firmly establish the source of the outbreak and, in essence, solve it almost before it became evident; however, legislative measures and some delays in traceback did not allow for sufficient control, resulting in one of the longest lasting Salmonella outbreaks in Denmark.