Goat prank closes NC high school football field for 6 months

Whoever released 10-12 goats on a North Carolina high school football field last week probably didn’t figure the field would be closed for six months.

But that’s exactly the result for athletes at Burns High School in Lawndale, N.C., who aren’t too happy about having to find a new home for their games after a recent prank on the school’s football field.

Donna Carpenter, the school system’s public information officer, said a recent outbreak of E. coli in the county prompted the extended closure.

“We had some students who, as a prank, put some goats out on the football field,” Carpenter told ABCNews.com. ”You have to understand what’s been going on in this area. This county has a very large county fair. And this is a historically agricultural community.

“We have people who see and pet different animals, and there has been just shy of 100 cases of E. coli. There was a small child that passed away. Everybody was very on edge about E. coli.”

Unpasteurized juices still risky

My hockey equipment is covered in pigeon poop.

Or so I’m told by my friend Steve, who has organized pick-up hockey in Guelph for decades, and in whose barn my equipment has sat since 2006.

I never had fancy equipment; I bought my goalie pads off a 12-year-old whose parents were apparently more affluent than I.

But I could sell them for four times their value in Australia, where hockey exists, and Canadians always return with a bag full of gear, because it costs so much less in North America.

With Sorenne about to turn four-years-old, it’s time to introduce her to the ice – and there’s a rink in Brisbane. And with us returning to the U.S. for Dec. and Jan., the time was right to salvage what was left of my equipment and get some stuff for Sorenne.

Steve says he only found one of my skates.

Steve also works in government.

While driving to Florida this week, Steve took some of my equipment to Chapman in North Carolina (or mailed it) because I’ll see Chapman for a meeting about our shiga-toxic producing E. coli research.

While driving down the North Carolina coast, Steve stopped at this roadside market for some ol’ timey apple cider; unpasteurized cider has been the source of many an outbreak of foodborne illness.

Steve thought the name of the market was particularly apt.

A table of fresh juice-related outbreaks is available at http://bites.ksu.edu/fresh-juice-outbreaks.

Health officials focus on animal contact as source in Cleveland County fair outbreak; secondary cases emerge

NC health director Laura Gerald said today that reported cases linked to the Cleveland County (NC) fair rose to 106 including secondary cases.  Tragically, Gage Lefevers died early this week and an additional 12 individuals have been hospitalized as a result of the outbreak.

In 2009 I had a Campylobacter infection. Not sure of the source, but I was part of an outbreak of at least 2. Jack, who was then 1, also caught the bug. He displayed symptoms 13 days after my first diarrheal explosion. Suffering from a foodborne pathogen-related illness often leads to someone cleaning up your vomit and loose poop – which has a tendency to spread everywhere. Or your 1-year-old sticks his hands in the toilet while you shower. That’s how secondary cases occur.

According to Steve Lyttle of the Raleigh News & Observer,

Officials have interviewed more than 150 people who attended the fair but did not get sick. Gerald said investigators also have tested the soil at the fairgrounds.

“While we are making progress in our investigation, we have not yet determined a specific cause,” she says. “We may not be able to pinpoint a single source, but hope to have more conclusive results within a month.”

A table of petting zoo outbreaks is available at http://bites.ksu.edu/petting-zoos-outbreaks,  and a list of risk factors at petting zoos and animal contact events at fairs can be found in: Erdozain G, Kukanich K, Chapman B, Powell D. 2012. Observation of public health risk behaviours, risk communication and hand hygiene at Kansas and Missouri petting zoos – 2010-2011. Zoonoses Public Health. 2012 Jul 30. doi: 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2012.01531.x. [Epub ahead of print]

North Carolina fair E. coli cases now at 61, 1 child dead

As the number of confirmed and probable E. coli cases linked to the Cleveland County Fair petting zoo in North Carolina increased to 61, Sue Lynn Ledford, Wake County’s health director, said the NC State Fair, home to two similar outbreaks, is “being about as stringent as you can be without just totally taking away the core components of what the fair is about.”

“It’s just unbearable at times,” Tracy Roberts, the mother of 5-year-old Hannah Roberts, said, who was sickened at the Cleveland County Fair. “You lose it. You have your moments where you just want to fall on the floor and cry. And then you have moments that you feel strong – we’re going to make this, we’re going to get through it.”



Hannah Roberts is on daily kidney dialysis. 

Hannah’s parents said they hope she will move out of the ICU Tuesday night to another floor. 

They said she’s weak but able to talk and even ate a little bit on Tuesday. 

Both Tracy Roberts and her husband Mike said the support they’ve received from family, friends, and even strangers on Facebook is amazing. 

They said Hannah went to the petting zoo area but a noise scared her and she didn’t touch anything. Tracy Roberts said she still washed Hannah’s hands. She said her daughter did ride several rides, though, and officials say the E. coli bacteria is easily transferable. 





Cleveland County Fair Director Calvin Hastings said he doesn’t know what the exact source of the outbreak is.



Family said 12-year-old Jordan McNair just had his feeding tube removed but is still in a medically induced coma. 

The son of Cleveland County Sheriff Alan Norman, 13-year-old Alex Norman, is under close supervision at home, where they’re keeping him hydrated. 

Thoughts are also with the family that lost a child to the outbreak: 2-year-old Gage Lefevers. 

His father is a Gastonia police officer and on Tuesday the department announced it had helped set up a memorial fund that people can donate toward at any Wells Fargo bank to help pay for hospital and funeral expenses. 



A year after a little boy, Hunter Tallent, got sick from an E. coli outbreak at the NC state fair, his family is suing. The family attorney plans to go after not only the state, but the commissioner of agriculture, the manager of the state fair and others.

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

Hope and handwashing is never enough; 1 dead, 37 sickened in E. coli outbreak tied to visitors to NC county fair

With one child dead and 37 now sick from E. coli O157 linked to a North Carolina county fair, the folks who run the NC state fair hope people will wash their hands and mostly avoid touching animals.

This is the best organizers can come up with after two previous North Carolina State Fair outbreaks – in 2004 and 2011 – sickened over 200 people.

In 2004, 187 people became ill with E. coli O157 after visiting the North Carolina State fair in Raleigh. One of those visitors was a two-year-old who was hospitalized for 36 days with hemolytic uremic syndrome. That led to the passage of Aedin’s Law, which directs the Commissioner of Agriculture to adopt rules establishing sanitation requirements for petting zoos and animal exhibitions.

In 2011, 25 attendees at the same fair acquired E. coli O157 by walking through the Kelley Building where a livestock competition was held. The epidemiology didn’t point to animal contact as a risk factor.

Hope and handwashing is never enough.

At least six of the 37 people sickened in the Cleveland County Fair outbreak in Shelby remained hospitalized Sunday.

Since last year’s outbreak, State Fair organizers have invested more than $200,000 in preventive measures.

Hand-washing stations have better lighting and larger signs. Animal exhibits and food vendors are placed farther apart. Most noticeably, new routes and barriers in animal buildings limit contact between humans and animals.

Kevin White said his family has not gotten sick in 12 years of visiting the livestock and animal exhibits at the fair.

“That’s probably the main point of our adventure out,” White said.

And that’s a common thread in most risk management failures: nothing went wrong last time, so something probably won’t go wrong this time.

Go hang out at petting zoos or the exhibits at county and state fairs and watch what little kids do; we have. So have others.

As Anderson and Weese found in 2011 at a temporary petting zoo in Guelph using video observation, 58 per cent of visitors performed some form of hand hygiene (either using water, soap and water, or hand sanitizer), and two interventions (improved signage while offering hand sanitizer, and verbal hand hygiene reminders by venue staff) were associated with increased hand hygiene compliance. U.K. health officials currently recommend handwashing stations with soap and water only (no wipes or sanitizers).

And while some studies suggest inadequate handwashing facilities may have contributed to enteric disease outbreaks or washing hands was protective against illness, others suggest relevant infectious agents may be aerosolized and inhaled. Handwashing tool selection may also contribute to the success of hand hygiene as a preventive measure, as some outbreak investigations have reported alcohol-based hand sanitizer was not protective against illness, especially when hands are soiled.

In the fall of 2009, an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak at Godstone Petting Farm in the U.K resulted in 93 illnesses – primarily little kids.

The investigation into the Godstone outbreak identified evidence of environmental contamination outside the main barn, indicating acquisition of illness through both direct animal or fecal contact, and indirect environmental contact (e.g. contacting railings or soiled footwear).

Aerosolization of potential pathogens is also possible, as suggested in an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak at a county fair in Oregon, in which 60 people fell ill.

As part of the response to the Godstone outbreak, U.K. health types recommended handwashing stations with soap and water only (no wipes or sanitizers, because they don’t work that well under certain conditions).

Ihekweazu et al. subsequently concluded that in the Godstone outbreak, “handwashing conferred no demonstrable protective effect. …

“Moreover, from the findings of many previous published studies, it must be assumed that all petting or open farms are potentially high-risk environments for the acquisition of VTEC O157 infection.”

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

Erdozain G, Kukanich K, Chapman B, Powell D. 2012. Observation of public health risk behaviours, risk communication and hand hygiene at Kansas and Missouri petting zoos – 2010-2011. Zoonoses Public Health. 2012 Jul 30. doi: 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2012.01531.x. [Epub ahead of print]

Abstract below:

Observation of public health risk behaviors, risk communication and hand hygiene at Kansas and Missouri petting zoos – 2010-2011Outbreaks of human illness have been linked to visiting settings with animal contact throughout developed countries. This paper details an observational study of hand hygiene tool availability and recommendations; frequency of risky behavior; and, handwashing attempts by visitors in Kansas (9) and Missouri (4), U.S., petting zoos. Handwashing signs and hand hygiene stations were available at the exit of animal-contact areas in 10/13 and 8/13 petting zoos respectively. Risky behaviors were observed being performed at all petting zoos by at least one visitor. Frequently observed behaviors were: children (10/13 petting zoos) and adults (9/13 petting zoos) touching hands to face within animal-contact areas; animals licking children’s and adults’ hands (7/13 and 4/13 petting zoos, respectively); and children and adults drinking within animal-contact areas (5/13 petting zoos each). Of 574 visitors observed for hand hygiene when exiting animal-contact areas, 37% (n=214) of individuals attempted some type of hand hygiene, with male adults, female adults, and children attempting at similar rates (32%, 40%, and 37% respectively). Visitors were 4.8x more likely to wash their hands when a staff member was present within or at the exit to the animal-contact area (136/231, 59%) than when no staff member was present (78/343, 23%; p<0.001, OR=4.863, 95% C.I.=3.380-6.998). Visitors at zoos with a fence as a partial barrier to human-animal contact were 2.3x more likely to wash their hands (188/460, 40.9%) than visitors allowed to enter the animals’ yard for contact (26/114, 22.8%; p<0.001, OR= 2.339, 95% CI= 1.454-3.763). Inconsistencies existed in tool availability, signage, and supervision of animal-contact. Risk communication was poor, with few petting zoos outlining risks associated with animal-contact, or providing recommendations for precautions to be taken to reduce these risks.

North Carolina fair linked to toddler E. coli death

Not only is this tragic, it’s infuriating.

Gage Lefevers, a toddler who had visited the Cleveland County Fair died from E. coli Friday afternoon.

Gage was one of 16 people in four counties who may have been sickened with the bacteria.

“I can’t imagine what that family is going through,” said Beth McNair, who has a son being treated for E. coli. Jordan McNair is said to be slowly improving.

Family members of other E. coli victims told WBTV that they are all gathered in support at the hospital tonight.

One of the Gaston County residents with E. coli is a 12-year-old boy who has been hospitalized since Monday.

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

Erdozain G, Kukanich K, Chapman B, Powell D. 2012. Observation of public health risk behaviours, risk communication and hand hygiene at Kansas and Missouri petting zoos – 2010-2011. Zoonoses Public Health. 2012 Jul 30. doi: 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2012.01531.x. [Epub ahead of print]

Outbreaks of human illness have been linked to visiting settings with animal contact throughout developed countries. This paper details an observational study of hand hygiene tool availability and recommendations; frequency of risky behavior; and, handwashing attempts by visitors in Kansas (9) and Missouri (4), U.S., petting zoos. Handwashing signs and hand hygiene stations were available at the exit of animal-contact areas in 10/13 and 8/13 petting zoos respectively. Risky behaviors were observed being performed at all petting zoos by at least one visitor. Frequently observed behaviors were: children (10/13 petting zoos) and adults (9/13 petting zoos) touching hands to face within animal-contact areas; animals licking children’s and adults’ hands (7/13 and 4/13 petting zoos, respectively); and children and adults drinking within animal-contact areas (5/13 petting zoos each). Of 574 visitors observed for hand hygiene when exiting animal-contact areas, 37% (n=214) of individuals attempted some type of hand hygiene, with male adults, female adults, and children attempting at similar rates (32%, 40%, and 37% respectively). Visitors were 4.8x more likely to wash their hands when a staff member was present within or at the exit to the animal-contact area (136/231, 59%) than when no staff member was present (78/343, 23%; p<0.001, OR=4.863, 95% C.I.=3.380-6.998). Visitors at zoos with a fence as a partial barrier to human-animal contact were 2.3x more likely to wash their hands (188/460, 40.9%) than visitors allowed to enter the animals’ yard for contact (26/114, 22.8%; p<0.001, OR= 2.339, 95% CI= 1.454-3.763). Inconsistencies existed in tool availability, signage, and supervision of animal-contact. Risk communication was poor, with few petting zoos outlining risks associated with animal-contact, or providing recommendations for precautions to be taken to reduce these risks.

13 now sick with E. coli from North Carolina county fair

People need to be a lot more careful than they ever thought when it involves animals and people.

Unfortunately, that point was hammered home this week as 13 people are now sick from an E. coli outbreak related to the Cleveland County Fair in North Carolina.

As of noon on Thursday, 8 children and 5 adults are known to have been sickened in the outbreak.  Eight of the illnesses are in Cleveland County residents, four are in Gaston County residents, and one case is from Lincoln County. 

One of the Gaston County residents with E. Coli is a 12-year-old boy who has been hospitalized since Monday. 

Thursday night, Jordan McNair was still in the intensive care unit at Levine Children’s Hospital in Charlotte.  Doctors began dialysis Wednesday.

“It was rough,” said Jordan’s older sister Hayley Totherow. “Just hoping every morning that I would hear good news. And when I didn’t hear that, it just scared me.”

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

Erdozain G, Kukanich K, Chapman B, Powell D. 2012. Observation of public health risk behaviours, risk communication and hand hygiene at Kansas and Missouri petting zoos – 2010-2011. Zoonoses Public Health. 2012 Jul 30. doi: 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2012.01531.x. [Epub ahead of print]

Outbreaks of human illness have been linked to visiting settings with animal contact throughout developed countries. This paper details an observational study of hand hygiene tool availability and recommendations; frequency of risky behavior; and, handwashing attempts by visitors in Kansas (9) and Missouri (4), U.S., petting zoos. Handwashing signs and hand hygiene stations were available at the exit of animal-contact areas in 10/13 and 8/13 petting zoos respectively. Risky behaviors were observed being performed at all petting zoos by at least one visitor. Frequently observed behaviors were: children (10/13 petting zoos) and adults (9/13 petting zoos) touching hands to face within animal-contact areas; animals licking children’s and adults’ hands (7/13 and 4/13 petting zoos, respectively); and children and adults drinking within animal-contact areas (5/13 petting zoos each). Of 574 visitors observed for hand hygiene when exiting animal-contact areas, 37% (n=214) of individuals attempted some type of hand hygiene, with male adults, female adults, and children attempting at similar rates (32%, 40%, and 37% respectively). Visitors were 4.8x more likely to wash their hands when a staff member was present within or at the exit to the animal-contact area (136/231, 59%) than when no staff member was present (78/343, 23%; p<0.001, OR=4.863, 95% C.I.=3.380-6.998). Visitors at zoos with a fence as a partial barrier to human-animal contact were 2.3x more likely to wash their hands (188/460, 40.9%) than visitors allowed to enter the animals’ yard for contact (26/114, 22.8%; p<0.001, OR= 2.339, 95% CI= 1.454-3.763). Inconsistencies existed in tool availability, signage, and supervision of animal-contact. Risk communication was poor, with few petting zoos outlining risks associated with animal-contact, or providing recommendations for precautions to be taken to reduce these risks.

Is handwashing access enough? NC fair promotes petting zoo cleanliness

After last year’s E. coli outbreak at the North Carolina State Fair, many local fairs like the one in Greensboro are being extra careful to ensure sanitation around animal exhibits.

“I think it raises awareness and educates people on not only keeping yourself healthy by washing your hands, but also keeping the animals safe,” said Wendy Gumpert.

“My kids know after you touch a chicken, after you touch an egg or chicken coop, go wash your hands,” she explained.

Other parents like Elizabeth Scott are especially relieved to see the hand-washing stations.

“It’s a big thing to allow them to be able to wash their hands. Especially because my youngest one likes to put her hands straight in her mouth after she touches anything,” said Scott.

Scott says years ago, it was hard to even find hand sanitizer at fairs.

And I still say, people have to be careful, and a lot more careful than they thought.

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

 

NC cantaloupe grower lacked audits, traceability; all melons recalled

Food safety needs to be marketed at retail, otherwise consumers have no idea what they are buying.

Hucksters and posers can gas on about how their food is natural, sustainable, local and comes from a farmer I can look in the eye, but I’d rather know the food safety program behind the fruit and veg, along with the data to verify things are working.

Few hawkers, at a market or a supermarket, can answer those questions.

Consumers are left with faith-based food safety.

That faith usually rests with buyers at supermarkets and retailers.

So when it was revealed that Burch Farms had to recall the entire season’s worth of rock and honeydew melon because listeria was found and then it was discovered they had never had a food safety audit — a standard but inadequate minimal requirement to secure retail space — I wondered, who buys this stuff?

“The cantaloupes and honeydew melons involved in this expanded recall were sold to distributors between June 23rd and July 27th, in the following states: FL, GA, IL, KY, MA, MD, ME, MI, NC, NH, NJ, NY, OH, PA, SC, and VA, VT and WV. The melons may have further been distributed to retail stores, restaurants and food service facilities in other states."

Complete distribution details on the melons are not available, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Everyone buys it.

The Packer reports today that Listeria contamination at the Burch Farms melon packing facility in Faison, N.C., was confirmed on Aug. 13.

Company spokeswoman Teresa Burch said it has not had its cantaloupe operation audited by a third party for food safety practices, and although the company has traceability programs for other items, there is none in place for its melons.

Burch Equipment LLC, doing business as Burch Farms, originally recalled about 5,200 cantaloupes July 28 after the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Microbiological Data Program found listeria on one melon at retail during a random sampling.

The grower expanded the recall to include 188,900 cantaloupes Aug. 3 and corrected the variety from athena to caribbean golds. That expansion came after the FDA revealed it had found “unsanitary conditions” at the Burch packing shed.

Owner Jimmy Burch Sr. said he uses the sanitizer SaniDate in his packing facility’s water. According to the Burch Farms website, the operations are audited by PrimusLabs.

PrimusLabs in-house counsel Ryan Fothergill confirmed that the company has audited the leafy greens processing and field operations at Burch Farms but not the cantaloupe operation. Fothergill said Primus records show its staff was last at the Burch operation in March.

Burch said he planted only about 10 acres of honeydews for this season. The entire crop went to wholesalers. He said his farm has not had food safety issues in the past.

Of course not. Ignorance is bliss. And that’s the way growers and sellers prefer it. Market food safety at retail.

Food safety can be mind-numbing; sometimes it’s better to rock, not rockmelon

The most interesting line is again, buried at the bottom of the press release.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration decided to inspect the North Carolina cantaloupe grower that tested positive for listeria and then decided to immediately expand the recall. The recall expansion is based on unsanitary conditions found at the cantaloupe packing shed during FDA’s ongoing inspection that may allow for contamination of cantaloupes with Listeria monocytogenes.”

Who knows what would make individual growers shape up after 37 dead last year from listeria in cantaloupe. Inspection is a mess, audits seem worse, where’s the leadership?

Sometimes maybe it’s better to just rock: you don’t see bass-player-head bobbing like that or a Larry Robinson Montreal Canadians jersey any more.