Superbug found in Canadian pork products

of the Canadian Press reports that Canadian researchers have found antibiotic-resistant Staph in pork products in available at Canadian retail stores:

[The discovery] raises questions about how the contamination occurred, how frequently it happens and whether it has implications for human health.

Just under 10 per cent of sampled pork chops and ground pork recently purchased in four provinces tested positive for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus or MRSA, lead researcher Dr. Scott Weese reported Wednesday in a presentation to the International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases in Atlanta.

To date Weese’s team has tested 212 meat samples bought in four different provinces. Most were pork chops but the group also tested a few pork shoulder roasts and some ground pork.

None of the pork roasts carried the bacteria but an equal percentage of pork chops and ground pork did. The rates of positive MRSA tests ranged from zero per cent in one province to 33 per cent in another. Weese didn’t want to name the provinces.

What is most interesting to me are Weese’s comments about what food handlers actually do:

"If they do what they’re supposed to do in terms of meat handling, then it should be perfectly safe. But do people do that is the question?"

What food handlers do (whether in the restaurant, packing house, slaughter house or home) is an area of uncertainty, and there isn’t a whole lot of data around it.  We’ve been conducting some research of food handler practices using observation,  (T6-12, An Exploratory Study of Food-handling Practices at Church Dinners in Canada was presented at IAFP in 2007) and will be presenting some of our newest findings this summer at IAFP in Columbus, OH.

Georgia Lions Club serves Salmonella: 67 ill

A report released Friday by the East Metro Health District concluded that the October outbreak of salmonella in Newton County, Georgia, was associated with consumption of pulled pork sold by the Covington Lions Club at Sherman’s Last Burning.

A total of 67 illnesses were reported among attendees at the event, which took place from Oct. 12-14, 2007, at the Newton County Fairgrounds, and that stool cultures from 17 of the cases tested positive for Salmonella Newport.

Of those 67 reported cases, 28 individuals sought medical attention and five people were hospitalized.

The report concluded that salmonella was significantly associated with four factors: attendance on Oct. 12, eating the ticketed meal prepared by the Lions Club on Oct. 12, eating the pulled pork from the meal on Oct. 12 and consumption of some "other" food item from the ticketed meal.

Covington Lions Club President Mike Free said,

"The Lions Club is just mortified that people got sick at our event. We’re just glad that no one got seriously hurt. … The Lions have been cooking barbecue for 35 years and have never had this problem before and don’t plan on having it again and we’ll do everything in our power to make sure it doesn’t happen again."

Anyone who serves, prepares or handles food, in a restaurant, nursing home, day care center, supermarket, local market or yes, even  a Lion’s Club BBQ, needs some basic food safety training. And health inspectors are there to provide some minimal oversight.

BTW, kudos to the local health unit for some speedy reporting on the outbreak. Other outbreaks happen all the time, and the government-types involved — local, state/provincial, federal — are never heard from once the initial media interest is replaced by whatever celebrity is currently in rehab.