First death in RI salmonella-in-zeppole outbreak

Several media outlets are reporting the death today of a Rhode Island man in his 80s as a result of a salmonella outbreak linked to tainted zeppoles, made by DeFusco’s Bakery in Johnston.

The Health Department said Monday that 33 cases of suspected salmonella have been reported, and 17 people have been hospitalized with the illness. The pastry shells had been stored in used egg crates, which could have exposed them to raw eggs.

Beginning Tuesday, anyone with questions about the outbreak can call 401-222-8022 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. to speak with health department staff members.
 

33 now sick from salmonella in Rhode Island pastry

An additional eight cases of possible salmonella linked to DeFusco’s Bakery were reported on Monday, bringing the total to 33, up from 25 (the figure of 23 was corrected by the Rhode Island Depatrment of Health on Sunday).

Annemarie Beardsworth, Health Department spokeswoman, said that these cases were people who went to their doctors or the emergency room, or who called the Health Department, reporting symptoms of salmonella infection — nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. All had eaten zeppole, éclairs or bread made at DeFusco’s, in Johnston, in the days before it was shut down on Friday.

Those people were asked to provide stool samples for testing at the state laboratory; none has yet been confirmed as salmonella. One victim lives out of state.

Seventeen people were sick enough to require hospitalization. Beardsworth said this unusually high rate of hospitalization results from the fact that many people who ate the pastry were elderly and less able to fight off the infection.

Beardsworth said that DeFusco’s Johnston facility had passed routine inspections in April and December of last year.

But when a nursing home outbreak brought inspectors to the facility on Friday, they found that the custard for the pastry was not properly chilled, pastry shells were stored in cardboard boxes where raw eggs had been, and a food safety manager was not on the premises as required, she said.

Bakery stored zeppole shells in used egg crates; 23 now sick with salmonella from RI pastry

The Rhode Island Department of Health has increased to 23 the number of possible salmonella cases in people who consumed zeppoles made by DeFuscos’s Bakery in Johnston.

And the department now says the source of the salmonella contamination may not be just the cream used in the filling of the zeppole shells, but the shells themselves.

Andrea Bagnall-Degos, a Health Department spokeswoman, said Sunday that lab tests have confirmed 13 cases of salmonella so far among the suspected 23 reported illnesses. Thirteen people have been hospitalized; 10 remained in the hospital as of midday Sunday, she said.

The Providence Journal reports DeFusco’s Bakery voluntarily closed after health inspectors found that pastry cream was stored at unsafe temperature and in unsanitary conditions.

Bagnall-Degos said the health department has now determined that the bakery stored zeppole shells in used egg crates, possibly exposing the shells to raw egg residue.

19 sick in Rhode Island salmonella outbreak; zeppoles to blame?

The Rhode Island Department of Health says a salmonella outbreak may be related to a recent recall of baked goods.

The department says it has received reports of 19 people who are ill. It says nine of the 19 have tested positive for salmonella, and 13 have been hospitalized.

Health officials say many of the sickened people consumed zeppoles, an Italian pastry akin to a doughnut, made by DeFusco’s Bakery in Johnston.

On Friday, the department announced a recall of all baked goods sold at DeFusco’s following an inspection of the Johnston store. Officials say they found that pastry cream used in zeppoles and eclairs was stored at unsafe temperatures.

The owner of DeFusco’s voluntarily closed the bakery until further notice. The company’s goods also are sold at other stores.
 

Salmonella in spices; how Rhode Island helped crack the Daniele outbreak

The Providence Journal ran a feature Sunday about how a outbreak of Salmonella Montevideo in Daniele sausage that sickened 272 people in 44 states and was linked to black pepper imported from Vietnam. The investigation unearthed a few other surprises along the way, highlighting the challenges of an epidemiological investigation.

Primarily, it reinforces the coda, know thy suppliers. Excerpts below:

On a gray Friday last January, three representatives of the Rhode Island Office of Food Protection drove down a long driveway to a sprawling white building, a meat-processing plant in the backwoods of Burrillville.

They were making an unannounced visit — a surprise in more ways than one — to the headquarters of Daniele Inc., a company that for 34 years has been producing millions of pounds of dry-cured sausage. Daniele favors a low profile.

The place doesn’t even have a sign.

From the car, the inspectors telephoned Michael DeCesare, Daniele’s director of food safety, and told him that Daniele was “a company of interest” in a nationwide outbreak of salmonella.

DeCesare was flabbergasted. For one thing, salmonella is usually associated with chicken and eggs, not beef or pork. For another, he knew all the steps Daniele takes to ensure its meat is safe.

A 10-week investigation would prove him right, but not before following twists and turns so unlikely that Ernest M. Julian, Rhode Island’s chief of food inspection, wondered at one point if the contamination were an act of terrorism.

With over 100 people sick, Kathryn MacDonald, an epidemiologist with the Washington Department of Health, noticed that seven of the victims in her state shopped at Costco. The state asked them for permission to check the records of their purchases through their shopper’s cards. Now the investigators didn’t have to rely on anyone’s memory.

“It was just lucky that the product happened to be purchased consistently in a single chain [store] that kept records,” MacDonald said.

The records revealed one item that five of the seven Costco-shopping victims had purchased: Daniele Italian Brand Gourmet Pack, made in Burrillville.

The Gourmet Pack included only pepper-coated salami. The meat itself goes through a curing process that kills harmful bacteria. Then it is rolled in fat heated to 160 degrees, hot enough to kill any bacteria in the fat. Only after all these “kill steps” is the salami rolled in pepper. Most people eat it out of the package, uncooked.

The possibility that pepper could be carrying disease was unnerving. Pepper, imported from Asian farmlands, is something that almost everyone eats, often without knowing it –– in the seasonings of a restaurant chef or as an ingredient in packaged foods, where it is often identified only as “spices.”

Salmonella was found in black pepper from two different wholesalers that supplied Daniele –– Mincing Overseas Spice Co. and Wholesome Spice and Seasonings. Both were buying from Vietnam, but from different farms.

Then came a curve ball. A Daniele variety pack bought in Iowa tested positive for the outbreak strain. It contained “capocollo” that had been rolled in ground red pepper. It turns out that black pepper wasn’t the only spice applied after the “kill steps.” Tests began on ground red pepper.

In early February, Daniele was preparing to resume operations at two factories when another curve ball hit: Someone in Minnesota got sick after eating a Daniele product called “panino” — salami rolled in mozzarella and sprinkled with crushed red pepper. The panino was made at the third plant, the one that was never shut down, and never a focus of the investigation, because no ground pepper was used there.

And the crushed red pepper came from India and China, not Vietnam.

The situation was getting bizarre. There were two importers. Three countries of origin. Three types of pepper (ground black, ground red, crushed red) –– all containing salmonella Montevideo with the exact same genetic fingerprint as the bacteria that made people sick. What’s more, all the contaminated pepper had so far been found in one place: Daniele.

To make sure this never happens again, Daniele took the extraordinary step of installing a permanent laboratory in a trailer next to the factory. The laboratory tests the ingredients, the meat at various stages of production and the finished products –– a “multiple hurdle approach” that exceeds USDA requirements.

Camp and cheeseburgers shouldn’t kill – mother and son describe effects of E. coli O157 illness linked to Rhode Island camp; ‘I want it to be Ponderosa night again’

Stephen Smith of the Boston Globe writes this morning,

The signs of trouble arrived deep in the night: first, bloody diarrhea, then nausea

Austin Richmond nor his mother knew it at the time, but he had been infected with a potentially lethal germ known as E. coli O157:H7. And, according to a lawsuit filed yesterday, the 11-year-old from Lincoln, R.I., caught it doing what many children do when they are away at camp, by eating a cheeseburger.

There were trips to the emergency room, trips to the doctor’s office, and initial confusion over what was causing him to be so sick. For more than two weeks, Austin, a sixth-grader, has been banished from school and not just because of his own illness. There is also concern that, because his immune system has been so ravaged battling the E. coli infection, he might prove especially susceptible to swine flu, which killed another student at Lincoln Middle School over the weekend.

Austin’s mother, Jaimee Richmond, said,

“He just wants to go back to being him. He wants to be able to play soccer. He wants to go to Boy Scouts. He wants to go back to church, which are words I never thought I would hear coming out of his mouth. … “I’m angry, I’m sad, I’m confused, I’m overwhelmed. I just want to go back to normal life. Tuesday night, it used to be Ponderosa night because it’s cheap, it’s family, the kids loved it. I just want it to be Ponderosa night again.’’