Listeria in cantaloupe; seek and ye shall find; NC melons recalled in NY

A North Carolina farm is recalling 580 cases of cantaloupes that were sent to New York because they could be contaminated with listeria.

Burch Equipment announced the voluntary recall Saturday.

The farm says the whole Athena cantaloupes were shipped July 15. They have a red label with Burch Farms.

Anyone with one of the cantaloupes should destroy the melon.

The Hannaford Bros. Co. supermarket chain also recalled the same melons.

Hannaford Supermarkets operates 181 stores in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York and Vermont.

At least 75 sick; norovirus fingered as cause of Nashville NC restaurant outbreak

After clinical testing, public health officials in Nash County, North Carolina, say norovirus made dozens of people sick after eating at the Ribeye’s Steakhouse Restaurant, and now may be spreading in the community.

Heath officials say it’s likely that it started in the restaurant and spread into the town.

They believe the restaurant is norovirus-free as of Friday. 

Add to list of things not to say ‘We’re safest place in town to eat’ after outbreak; 75 reports of illness from Ribeye’s Steakhouse in NC

The Nash County Health Department is investigating a possible foodborne illness outbreak in Nash County after 75 people reported becoming ill after eating at Ribeye’s Steakhouse in Nashville last week.

Two people were hospitalized after eating there and have been released, but it has not been confirmed whether their illnesses were associated with eating at the restaurant, said health department spokeswoman Amy Belflower Thomas.

The Rocky Mount Telegram reports she could not say what food dish at the restaurant, if any, might have caused the illnesses.

“Seventy-five people have called us and said they were sick or ate with someone who was sick, and gave me their names,” Thomas said. “It’s not like we’ve gone out and asked people to call us.”

Janice Manning, an owner of Ribeye’s Restaurant, said patrons can feel confident the food served is safe to eat.

“I just spoke to the health department recently,” she said. “I’ve not heard that anything was confirmed. They are working on it.”

She said the restaurant has been sanitized and all of the food that was there when the complaints were filed has been thrown out.

“We are probably the safest place in town (to eat),” Manning said.

She noted the restaurant has had consistently high grades from the health department on its sanitation report card.

Raw eggs risky in US too: Popular Charlotte restaurant sued over Salmonella

Local health types say the Toast Café in Dilworth, North Carolina, was responsible for giving at least 15 people salmonella. In all, 29 people reported being sick after dining there in late March, 2012.

Drew Falkenstein, described by WBTV as a food contamination attorney, is representing a 29-year-old Charlotte man who he said got sick after eating eggs benedict prepared by the restaurant on March 25.

Lynn Lathan, with the Mecklenburg County Department of Health, said the restaurant was doing some things that could point to an infection.

"They were making up hollandaise sauce without using a pasteurized egg. A pasteurized egg is one that has been treated so it is no longer potentially hazardous.

Once the sauce was mixed, it was allowed to sit at room temperature. We did not have proper refrigeration. We had pooling of eggs going on," Lathan said.

Robert Maynard, the managing partner of Toast Café, said in a statement: "After working alongside the health department investigating this unfortunate incident thoroughly, Toast Café is in complete compliance with the health department with a 96 percent score. Our patrons, and their health, safety and satisfaction are our top priorities."

A table of raw-egg related outbreaks in Australia, just Australia, is available at http://bites.ksu.edu/raw-egg-related-outbreaks-australia.

Food poisoning case could be linked to Nashville, NC restaurant

The Nash County Health Department in North Carolina is investigating several reports of gastroenteritis that it says might be associated with Ribeye’s Steakhouse off N.C. Highway 64 in Nashville.

Health officials started receiving calls late Thursday about the food poisoning, which they say has symptoms similar to a stomach bug, including nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. One person who could be connected to this case has been hospitalized.

Health officials said they do not know what type of organism caused the sickness, and test results could take days. They are still investigating to determine its origin.

"We have to look at some other things to make sure it’s not a red herring, so we are pursuing that in our investigation too, to make sure the link is true," said Amy Bellflower-Thomas of the Nash County Health Department.

The owner of the restaurant said she was "devastated," and wasn’t sure how people could have gotten sick after eating there. As a precaution, she said staff was disinfecting the entire restaurant. 

Message should be cook and don’t cross-contaminate tempeh; western North Carolina Salmonella Paratyphi B outbreak up to 37 cases

There are now 37 people confirmed sick with Salmonella Paratyphi B linked to tempeh. Buncombe County Health Department in North Carolina has outlined three paths for infection: folks who have eaten tempeh (from Smiling Hara); others who have connections to someone ill with Salmonella Paratyphi b (person-to-person); and, a third group that is under further investigation to determine if there are other sources of contamination.
 
According to the update (and big props to the Buncombe Co health folks for releasing daily updates):
 
Confirmatory lab results are expected later this week that should confirm whether the tempeh is a match to the type of Salmonella associated with the current outbreak. At this time we cannot assure people that if they stay away from the tempeh that they won’t get sick. Health officials appreciate the precautionary measures taken by Smiling Hara, who recalled their tempeh product while awaiting confirmation that the tempeh is directly linked to this outbreak.
 
On the Smiling Hara Tempeh website, the product is marketed as a raw food and unpasteurized:
 
ONCE SMILING HARA TEMPEH IS THAWED YOU HAVE 5 DAYS TO COOK IT (for Listeria concerns? -ben).  For best taste and highest nutrtional value do not re-freeze. Our Tempeh is a raw food and is intended to be cooked.  In the heating process some of the probiotics and digestive enzymes will die, however, some will be retained and the mushroom qualities remain in full.  After eating our product regularly you will notice the cleansing effect it will have on your body, and how good you will feel after a “happy belly” meal including Smiling Hara Tempeh, vegetables, and grains.
 
It’s unclear from the available information whether illnesses have been linked to consuming this product at restaurants or in the home (or both). And it’s really unclear what folks were doing with this product once in the kitchen: did they know it was raw? Did they know there was any potential risk? Was the product labeled and did anyone follow the label directions?
 
Cross-contamination also could be a factor here – it’s likely that folks in the kitchen treat this stuff more like leeks and potatoes than raw chicken. Inadequately cleaned leeks and potatoes were thought to be responsible for an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak in the UK that sickened 250 people over months.
 

Tests confirm Salmonella in Smiling Hara Tempeh as outbreak worsens

A North Carolina maker of fermented bean product confirmed Monday evening that its product tested positive for salmonella. as an outbreak caused by the bacteria worsens.

Smiling Hara Tempeh, which makes a soy, black bean and black-eyed pea version of the product, according to its website, had pulled the food from shelves earlier Monday.

The Asheville Citizen-Times reports that tests by the N.C. Department of Agriculture confirmed the bacteria was present in a sample collected from a routine inspection by the Food and Drug Protection Division, according to a statement from Smiling Hara Tempeh. Further testing is being done, it added.

The tempeh is sold to more than 30 local stores and restaurants, including Earth Fare supermarket and the Laughing Seed restaurant downtown, the website says.

The number of salmonella cases rose by five over the weekend to 34, officials with the Buncombe County Health Department said Monday.

The owners of the tempeh company, which lists its address as Asheville, could not be reached by phone or email Monday afternoon.

The tempeh company shares a kitchen, Blue Ridge Food Ventures in Candler, with 20-40 other local food producers, making everything from pretzels to hot sauce.

The state-created economic development group Advantage West oversees the kitchen used to help small local businesses.

Advantage West CEO Scott Hamilton stressed that there was no direct link with the tempeh and the bacterial outbreak.

Uh-huh.

More illnesses linked to Salmonella Paratyphi B outbreak in western North Carolina

According to the Buncombe County Department of Health an additional five illnesses have been added to a cluster of illnesses linked to travel to Buncombe Co (and eating or drinking something there?).

The Buncombe County Department of Health reports that 5 more cases of Salmonella Paratyphi B were identified over the weekend, bringing the total to 34, as of Monday, April 30, 2012. The local health department is working with NC Department of Public Health, Center for Disease Control, US Department of Agriculture and others to continue intensive testing, interviewing, and epidemiological investigation of the outbreak in order to squelch the spread of the disease. Cases still appear to have been associated with residence or travel to Buncombe County since February 28, 2012. A single source of infection has not been confirmed.

WYFF4 reports that Buncombe County Health Director Gibbie Harris said there have also been cases confirmed in other parts of North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and New York.

"None of us think that we’ve seen the peak of this yet," said Harris. "This (strain) has a longer incubation period, so you can go up to 30 days after being exposed before you actually show symptoms."

Harris said this particular strain is also different than the strain of salmonella usually seen because it’s treated with an antibiotic and causes more severe symptoms.
 

North Carolina food regs to be in line with food code; rules built on science are good

My initiation into the real world of food production was in the vegetable production industry. As a 22-year-old naive graduate student Doug sent me out to Leamington Ontario (that’s in Canada) with Amber Bailey, to see whether I could work with greenhouse producers on keeping their wash water and employee’s hands clean. That trip turned into a MSc project and I spent three years working with almost 200 farmers on risk-reduction practices as I took product and water samples.

On one of those visits a farmer wanted to talk about food safety regulations, especially whether farms would ever see the type of regulation restaurants do. He said that a law might help provide some uniformity to how farmers managed risk and could provide a level playing field (because even in 2002 they were seeing inconsistent audits/auditors) but he finished by saying something like, "I don’t really want to be regulated like restaurants, with inspectors who have never been on a farm sniffing around here looking for problems."

My experience on the farms (and then in restaurants) also taught me that getting someone to change what they do is a lot easier if you can describe the evidence behind the new practice. Telling folks about outbreaks and data in a compelling way matters.

The folks I encounter regardless of sector, still ask a lot of questions about the whys behind a particular rule or guidance.

Later this year, according to Thomas Goldsmith of the News & Observer, North Carolina will be adopting the FDA Model Food Code by reference – which means the state’s food service rules will be based on the best available science, will update automatically with subsequent versions of the code.

A useful food safety regulation has a nod to risk calculations (probability and consequences) and is built on some sort of evidence (whether that be strong outbreak investigation data or laboratory data). The FDA model food code, for the most part, fits this.

The Model Food Code also provides the best example of how to systematically evaluate the times, temperatures and practices and make recommendations for revision when new information comes up (the biannual Conference for Food Protection provides this nice framework).

Cold food will have to be kept colder. Restaurant employees who have certain symptoms won’t be allowed to work. And cooks won’t touch ready-to-eat food with bare hands, but only with gloves, deli paper or tongs.

These are just a few of the changes that will accompany North Carolina’s expected adoption of federal Food and Drug Administration guidelines that will replace a much-amended set of regulations dating from 1976, state and local officials said.

Developed by the FDA in collaboration with scientists, academics, industry representatives and physicians, the Food Code is revised every four years based on the most up-to-date science available, said Larry Michael, head of the food protection program at the state division.

“The approach in the past involved an endless process of revising the rules and standards,” Michael said. “This proved to be inefficient.

A 2010 survey in Wake County reinforced the need for new guidelines, said Andre Pierce, environmental health and safety director for county environmental services. About 90 percent of restaurants and other food-service places didn’t have the kinds of policies to keep sick workers home that are included in the federal code.

Physical conditions that rule out working in food service are diarrhea, vomiting, sore throat with fever, jaundice and lesions with pus.
Some provisions, such as keeping cold food at 41 degrees instead of 45 degrees, will be phased in to give restaurants time to comply. The code also will require that every establishment have a certified food-safety manager on site at all times.

The state estimates that compliance will cost the food service industry $5.5 million during the first four years but that restaurants and other establishments will realize benefits that can’t be quantified from not making people sick. Industry figures state that an outbreak of foodborne illness costs a restaurant an average of $75,000.

Meanwhile, during the same four-year period, the state is expected to save $6 million compared to current costs of dealing with such outbreaks.

Given repeated, widely publicized incidents of foodborne illness, many restaurants already follow the provisions of the FDA code, said Alyssa Barkley, director of health and safety for the North Carolina Restaurant and Lodging Association. “I have been at the table for a couple of years throughout this process,” said Barkley, whose background is in public health. “We have been at the table making sure that the rules that are adopted aren’t going to be a major burden on businesses.”

Winter vomiting sickness happens in not-so-cold weather too

I’m currently experiencing the warmest winter I’ve ever had – Raleigh hasn’t had a day below freezing (a few nights) and I have yet to scrape my car off in the morning. Yesterday I strapped my kids into a bike trailer and rode around on a few paved trails and tomorrow it’s going to be close to 70F. I love the south. But just because it’s warm doesn’t mean that the state will avoid norovirus – the famed winter vomiting sickness.

In 1929 Dr. John Zahorsky wrote about a history of gastrointestinal illness events, which would become norovirus. After seeing children develop sporadic cases of vomiting, supplemented by watery diarrhea each year between November and May, through over 30 years of clinical practice, he coined the term winter vomiting sickness.

Over 125 folks in Conover NC dealt with a norovirus outbreak back in mid January. According to the Raleigh News & Observer, most illnesses were linked to eating at the Harbor Inn Seafood restaurant on January 13 and 14 – but some folks got sick after eating there as recently as January 20th.

Catawba County Public Health has been working with the N.C. Division of Public Health to figure out what’s been making people sick since the first cases were reported Jan. 17.

Although Public Health has not announced what food or foods caused the illness, victims have stated that the members of their party who got sick after eating at Harbor Inn were the ones who ate tossed salad.

Neither tossed salad or an exposure period of over a week would be all that surprising – tossed salad can be prepped by someone who doesn’t see themselves as a food handler – and noro, especially in cooler months, is pretty stable in the environment (and could stick around to infect for weeks).