‘Worms in the pool, uncooked meals and flies on food’ UK newlyweds sue Thailand hotel

A newly married couple are suing a four-star hotel after the bride fell violently ill and was hospitalized after contracting a serious infection while on their dream honeymoon in Asia. 

The Daily Mail reports that Paul, 36, and Xanta Watts, from Kettering, Northamptonshire, spent £10,000 on a three-week tour of Hong Kong, Singapore and Thailand – where the bride started to feel unwell.

Koh Yao Resort Boutique Beach Resort & SpaWhile staying at the four-star Paradise Koh Yao Resort Boutique Beach Resort & Spa on Koh Yao Noi Island near Phuket, Xanta, 29, suffered diarrhoea, vomiting and severe stomach cramps. 

She fell violently ill and was hospitalized for seven days after contracting Paratyphoid – a disease caused by the salmonella bacteria – diagnosed when she returned to the UK.

The couple claim they saw worm-like creatures in the swimming pools and fresh food being piled on top of old dishes at the luxury resort. 

A spokesman for Kuoni said: ‘We take any claims surrounding the health and well-being of our customers very seriously indeed and we are currently investigating this case.’

Poop cruise passengers suing Carnival for $5000 a month for life

After a crisis like an outbreak companies have to balance between rebuilding the brand and pragmatism. In 2013, passengers of the Carnival Triumph, affectionately known as the Poop Cruise, were stuck at sea for 5 days with no power, little food and lots of public health risks. Folks reported sewage running down the walls and floors and being asked to defecate in bags and urinate in showers due to a lack of functioning toilets.
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In damage control mode, Carnival offered discounts, some cash and complementary bathrobes.
Some cruisers felt Carnival didn’t go far enough to make up for the experience and have sued the cruise line.
A lawsuit brought by 33 passengers of the ill-fated 2013 voyage could change how cruise lines insulate themselves from legal actions, according to maritime legal experts.
The Miami lawsuit is the first from the Triumph incident to go to trial, with others in preparation, according maritime lawyers.
In a statement, Carnival Corp said that while it recognizes its guests experienced uncomfortable conditions, everyone returned safely and were provided with a full refund, a free future cruise and an additional $500 per person.
“This is an opportunistic lawsuit brought by plaintiff’s counsel and plaintiffs who seek to make a money grab,” a company spokeswoman said.
One of the plaintiffs, Debra Oubre, 59, said she has experienced panic and anxiety attacks since the cruise, and also blames the experience for a urinary tract infection. 
“It was chaotic. People were in dire need of help,” said Oubre. “We were standing in line for food for five hours.”
Cruise lines like Carnival have successfully inoculated themselves against passenger lawsuits by printing stringent terms on their tickets that require passengers to waive their right to a class-action lawsuit. 

Lawyers win: Wal-Mart files suit in Jensen cantaloupe case

There’s a food safety shell game for fresh produce involving growers, retailers and auditors.

Consumers are losing, lawyers are winning.

Tom Karst of The Packer reports that Wal-Mart Stores Inc., facing a lawsuit from the family of a man who died after eating a cantaloupe bought at one of its stores – one of 33 who died in the 2011 listeria-in-cantaloupe.salmonellacantaloupe outbreak —  is now suing the grower, distributor and the grower’s third-party auditor.

In a complaint filed in Wyoming federal court in late January, Wal-Mart asserts third-party claims against Edinburg, Texas, distributor Frontera Produce Ltd., auditors Primus Group Inc. and Bio Food Safety Inc., and Jensen Farms. Primus subcontracted Bio Food Safety to undertake the on-site audit of the cantaloupe farm, which resulted in a superior rating of 96%.

The third-party complaint is tied to a wrongful death lawsuit brought in Wyoming against Bentonville, Ark.-based Wal-Mart by Frederick Lollar, the husband of the deceased woman..

Bill Marler, Seattle food safety attorney handling about 45 of the 66 victim cases related to the listeria outbreak, said it is not unusual for a retailer to bring action against upstream suppliers, but Wal-Mart’s naming of a third-party auditor is unusual.

£1.7m for Turkish holiday nightmare families

The owners of the Holiday Village resort in Sarigerme were ordered by the High Court in London yesterday to pay a group settlement, which will see more than 160 children and 435 adults who stayed at the hotel receive holidayvillage_turkeydamages of up to £25,000 each.

More than 400 holidaymakers suffered gastric illness during the summer of 2009, with more than 100 contracting infections such as Salmonella, Cryptosporidium, Campylobacter and E.coli.

A further 150 did not suffer illness themselves, but had their holidays affected by the sickness of family, friends or other guests staying at the hotel.

Holidaymakers reported seeing feces floating in swimming pools, while some food was seen to be undercooked and left uncovered for long periods. Crockery and cutlery in the restaurant was often found to be dirty and public toilets were grubby and had no hot water.

Some travellers were so ill they needed hospital treatment at the resort, while others still had to be treated after they returned to the UK.

First Choice said that it did not comment on settlement payouts.

Leafy greens cone of silence leads to Canadian lawsuit over E. coli

In a lawsuit filed late last week, attorneys allege that lettuce sold by California-based Tanimura & Antle led to a Canadian woman’s E. coli infection.

The family of a Canadian woman who allegedly died after eating E. coli-contaminated lettuce sold by California-based Tanimura & Antle filed a lawsuit against the company late last week in U.S. District Court for the Northern District lettuce.skull.noroof California (Case No. CV13-02140). The lawsuit was filed by Seattle-based Marler Clark and San Diego-based Gordon & Holmes.

According to the lawsuit, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) isolated E. coli O157:H7 from a sample of Tanimura & Antle Romaine lettuce and issued a “Health Hazard Alert” on August 17, 2012, warning the public not to consume “Wrapped Single Head Romaine”. The agency expanded its notice to include additional lettuce on August 20. The complaint alleges that Gail Bernacki, a Calgary, Alberta resident, consumed the Tanimura & Antle Romaine lettuce and fell ill with an E. coli O157:H7 infection in late August, 2012. The complaint states that Ms. Bernacki was hospitalized for several weeks and did not return to her baseline functional status despite extensive rehabilitation and hospitalization. She passed away on January 16, 2013. Attorneys allege that E. coli O157:H7 bacteria isolated from Ms. Bernacki’s stool during her acute E. coli illness was genetically indistinguishable from bacteria the CFIA had isolated from the Tanimura & Antle Romaine lettuce.

“Although growers of leafy greens have made huge strides in food safety since the E. coli outbreak of 2006, this case shows that there is more to do,” said Marler Clark managing partner, Bill Marler.

A table of leafy green outbreaks is available at http://bites.ksu.edu/leafy-greens-related-outbreaks.

Family sues over 2011 NC state fair outbreak; tarantula harms 3-year-old at birthday

Brangelina may or may not have a petting zoo for their kids in France, but a Shelby family is suing North Carolina for up to $500,000 after their three-year-old son contracted  an E. coli infection at the state fair in 2011.

A lawsuit that was filed said medical bills for Hunter Tallent, who was 2 courtlynn.petting.zooyears old at the time he got sick, totaled nearly $90,000.

Their attorney said they believe that the Department of Agriculture did not do enough to warn and protect people. 

“We believe they just didn’t have enough signage, stations, soap and water, hand sanitizer, and they could have done a lot more,” said attorney Sean Cobourn. 

In Toronto, a family thought it would a good idea to host a birthday party for their three-year old son and a dozen friends featuring a baby kangaroo, an owl and a tarantula.

According to the National Post, just seconds after their toddler held the furry arachnid, he began to blink, rub his eye, then cry, for hours, and in the days after.

Alison Litzinger and her husband, Matt, later learned the Rose Hair tarantula, brought by the exotic animal handler they hired, shot tiny barbed Rose Hair tarantulahairs into their son’s eye — a little-known defence mechanism other than the poisonous bite most people fear.

“It was pretty traumatic for our son,” said Mrs. Litzinger. “We tried to wash his eyes out, and he just started screaming at the top of his lungs.”

These microscopic fibres, called urticating hairs, cause stinging and itching when in contact with the skin. When in a person’s eye, however, the tiny barbs of the hair hook in, slowly sinking deeper into the eyeball and potentially causing damage to vision, making it very difficult, if not impossible, to remove, said Dr. Kamiar Mireskandari, an ophthalmologist at Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children.

A table of petting zoo outbreaks is available at http://bites.ksu.edu/petting-zoos-outbreaks.

8 sickened; 5 families sue butcher for Salmonella in sausages in Italy

Five households have banded together to pursue legal action against an Italian butcher alleged to have provided Salmonella-infested sausage.

The butcher is accused of manslaughter and trade of food substances harmful and leading to unintentional injuries.

The butcher’s shop is open after the premises were cleaned and restored.

New York convict claims food is killing him, files lawsuit

I ate some bad food in prison: the worst was saltpeter and horse nuts, some sort of canned stone fruit in a syrupy moss.

And this was at the correctional facility that had its own canning plant to ship the horse nuts off to other patrons and guests of the Ontario government.

Guess it wasn’t as bad as a former Rikers inmate who is suing New York City for $80 million claiming that the prison food almost killed him. Michael Isolda, who weighed 460 pounds before he underwent gastric bypass surgery, says he was only given four minutes at a time to eat his measly prison meals—because of his surgery, that speed-eating caused him to vomit after every meal and eventually separated his stomach from his intestine. “For me, Rikers Island is a death sentence,” he said in his lawsuit. “It’s not a matter of surviving and worrying about inmates. I have to worry about the food killing me.”

Dog food Salmonella outbreak grows; family of infant files lawsuit

When I talk about toddlers learning to crawl and heading for the dog dish, I’m not thinking of 8-week-olds.

A federal lawsuit in New Jersey alleging an infant was sickened by salmonella-contaminated dog food may be the first in the nation to hit the courts in the wake of a recent pet food recall.

The New Jersey Law Journal reports at least 15 people in nine states and Canada have reportedly fallen ill as a result of contact with pet food made by Diamond Pet Foods, which announced the recall on April 6 and has since expanded it to additional brands.

Eisenberg v. Diamond Pet Food Processors, 12-cv- 3127, filed May 25 in federal court in Trenton, alleges that a two-month-old child became sick with diarrhea, fever and loss of appetite on April 11. A day later, his pediatrician sent him to St. Peter’s University Hospital, where he spent three days and was diagnosed with salmonella. A stool sample later tested positive for the same strain of salmonella that spurred the recall, salmonella infantis.

The child’s father, Nevin Eisenberg of Marlboro, alleges he bought a bag of a Diamond brand — Kirkland Signature Super Premium Healthy Weight Dog Food with chicken and vegetables — at the Costco Wholesale Corporation store in Morganville.

The complaint does not specify how the child, identified as C.A.E., became exposed to salmonella.

But, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration warned yesterday the multi-state outbreak of Salmonella Infantis infections continues to grow.

FDA became involved in early April when the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development reported detecting Salmonella from an intact package of Diamond Naturals Lamb and Rice Formula for Adult Dogs, collected during retail surveillance sampling. Diamond Pet Food was notified of the sampling results, and agreed to voluntarily recall this product on April 6, 2012.

At that time, there were no known dog illnesses reported.

An additional finding of Salmonella in a sample taken by the Ohio Department of Agriculture, from an opened bag of Diamond Brand Chicken Soup for the Pet Lover’s Soul Adult Light Formula dry dog food collected from the home of an ill person, and an unopened bag of the product collected from a retail store led to a recall of that product on April 26, 2012

A sample of Diamond Puppy Formula dry dog food collected by FDA during an inspection at the South Carolina production facility also yielded Salmonella Infantis, which led to a recall of that product on April 30, 2012.

Public health officials used DNA fingerprints of Salmonella bacteria obtained through diagnostic testing with pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, or PFGE, to investigate cases of human illness. CDC reports that this outbreak strain (Infantis) is rare, and typically only 0 to 3 cases are reported per month to PulseNet.

Through interviews by state public health officials, FDA’s review of consumer complaints, and from a comparison of pet products from human exposure, some brands of dry pet food produced by Diamond Pets Foods at a single manufacturing facility in South Carolina have now been linked to human Salmonella infections.

FDA, CDC, and state investigations are ongoing in an effort to determine if other brands of dry dog food produced at the South Carolina facility may be linked to confirmed human illnesses. FDA will provide updates on the investigation as new information becomes available.

Clean up the spilled gravy or get sued if someone slips

A far north Queensland woman is seeking more than half a million dollars in compensation after slipping on gravy at a bowls club (that’s what they call lawn bowling in Australia).

Eeva (Eeva) Johanna Watchers, 35, filed documents in the Cairns District Court this week saying she had fallen near a buffet at the Edmonton Bowls Club in July 2008 and dislocated her right knee.?? Ms Watchers says the slip left her with permanent knee damage and she’s been unable to return to work.