Salmonella cases traced to Sasquatch Music Festival

In an outbreak of cross-border unity, seven cases of salmonella have been confirmed in people who attended a Memorial Day weekend concert at the Gorge Amphitheater, three from Washington state and four from British Columbia.

The Grant County Health District announced Friday that Tom Petty had nothing to do with the salmonella as there were no cases associated with his concerts two weeks later on June 11-12.

Health district food inspectors were at the amphitheater Friday to ensure Lilith Fair didn’t make anyone barf and to monitor food handling practices.
 

E. coli cases in Washington state prompt closure of two child care facilities

We’ve got the best babysitter for Sorenne. We had two, but one went to France. The other is an early childhood development student, incredibly outgoing, and entertains Sorenne from 8-12 a.m. weekday mornings.

There are lots of great day cares and child care centers out there. But they need to be the bug, to think about how dangerous microorganisms move around in the environment, involving care givers, kids, food and poop.

Over the past week, one confirmed and two suspected E. coli illness cases have been reported to the Kittitas County Public Health Department. The confirmed case, a 5-year old Ellensburg resident, does not attend a child care facility. This child was hospitalized and has since recovered. The two suspected cases, siblings, attend Creative Kids Learning Center and Little Tot Town child care facilities, both in Ellensburg.

During a public health investigation, staff discovered that there are multiple other children and staff members with symptoms of the illness. Since some people with E. coli will have mild symptoms or no symptoms at all, and there is the potential for person-to-person spread of the illness, Kittitas County Health Officer Dr. Mark Larson is requiring a temporary closure of both facilities, effective immediately.

“We understand that the temporary closure of Creative Kids Learning Center and Little Tot Town will create a hardship for working parents. The decision was not made lightly. We believe that temporarily closing these facilities is the best option to protect the health of these children,” said Dr. Larson. An outbreak of E. coli in April 2010 associated with a child care facility in Clark County, Washington resulted in the hospitalization of four children, including one who died from the illness.

Children who attend Creative Kids Learning Center or Little Tot Town will not be able to attend any child care facility until they have two tests showing they are free of illness. These tests must be given at least 24 hours apart. Testing will be free for children who attend either of the affected child care facilities, and test kits can be picked up at the Kittitas Valley Community Hospital laboratory at any time.
 

State revokes license of day care where boy contracted fatal E. coli

The Washington-state home day care identified as the source of an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak that led to three children being hospitalized and the death of 4-year-old Ronan Wilson earlier this year has had its license revoked by the state.

The Columbian reports that Dianne and Larry Fletch had operated the day care for more than 20 years; their license was suspended in April while the state proceeded with an investigation.

The Department of Early Learning sent Dianne Fletch a seven-page letter explaining its decision to revoke her license. The letter was dated May 21, but the state announced the revocation on Thursday after receiving confirmation from the Fletches that they had received the letter, which had been sent by registered mail.

Larry Fletch said he and his wife will appeal the decision.

Toddler still in hospital after E. coli outbreak linked to raw milk in Minnesota; new outbreak in Washington state

The kids always get it worst.

An outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 linked to consumption of raw milk in Minnesota has felled at least four people, including a toddler who remains hospitalized.

And last night, Washington state officials reported that two recent infections with E. coli O157 have been identified in Washington residents who drank raw, unpasteurized milk. The two cases confirmed this month bring the count of infections this year associated with one Bellingham dairy to eight.

Each year, several dozen people are usually sickened by raw milk in Minnesota. But this is the first outbreak — two or more cases that are linked — in at least 15 years, Health Department officials say.

Assistant state epidemiologist Richard Danila said the Health Department found four cases of E. Coli O157:H7 between May 1 and 21, all of which had the same DNA fingerprint.

Two of those sickened were school-age children, one was a man who was at least 70 years old and the fourth was a toddler. All four were hospitalized: one overnight, two for four days, and one, the toddler, is still in the hospital after being admitted late last week.

Today, the Star-Tribune reports that Michael Hartmann, the organic farmer who produced the implicated raw milk in Minnesota, has for years fought the government’s efforts to regulate him. He last had a license to sell Grade A milk in 2001. He has kicked inspectors off his property, refused to tell a judge his name in court and asserted he is a "natural man" with a constitutional right to raise and sell food without government interference.

Dr. Kirk Smith, supervisor of state Health Department foodborne disease investigations said Thursday that the investigation of his dairy is continuing but said they have little doubt it produced the raw milk containing a deadly strain of E. coli, adding,

"I am concerned that we are going to hear about more cases.” It often takes up to two weeks for cases to surface.

Hartmann declined to talk about the outbreak with a reporter Thursday, other than to say, "It’s all been blown out of proportion."

I doubt the parents of the toddler feel that way.

In Washington, the two new patients say they drank raw milk produced by Jackie’s Jersey Milk in Whatcom County. WSDA has conducted additional testing of the firm’s product, but has not found E. coli in the milk. WSDA continues to work with the farm to review the dairy’s production and product handling practices.

The firm issued a product recall notice in February after WSDA found E. coli during routine sampling of the farm’s raw milk. Soon after the February recall, six patients with E. coli infections reported drinking the dairy’s product. People who were sick said they got the milk at retail stores in King, Snohomish, and Skagit counties.

An updated table of raw-milk related outbreaks is available at
http://bites.ksu.edu/rawmilk

Remembering a 4-year-old struck down by E. coli

KGW Local News reports that a four-year-old boy was remembered Saturday, after losing a heartbreaking battle with E. coli.

Ronan Wilson started feeling sick on March 26th. There had been an outbreak of E. coli at the Fletch Family Daycare, where Ronan frequented.

Ronan went on dialysis, but the bacteria attacked his colon. Doctors performed surgery. But they couldn’t save him. Ronan died on April 8th.

Ronan’s father Anthony said,

"Once he went to sleep from the anesthesia, that was it. The e.oli continued attacking his body and it moved into his brain and he never woke up from that."

Ronan’s mother Bonnie said,

"I’ll miss holding him. Him physically being here, that’s what I’ll miss the most."

Saturday, friends and family gathered at the Blackstone American Grill in Vancouver, Washington, to honor Ronan and raise money for his medical and funeral costs.

Washington parents ask: what can be learned from our child’s E. coli death?

I’m going to the doctor’s for my annual check-up on Tuesday. I know I don’t exercise enough anymore, so I have high blood pressure; I’m old; I’m tired; having babies at 47 doesn’t keep one young, it keeps one old and tired. I’ve got other issues, like some form of motion sickness that makes me barf, but we won’t get into that. And I’m not sure there’s much the doctor can tell me. My problems are trivial.

The Oregonian reports that Bonnie Wilson took her sick 4-year-old, Ronan (right) , to the pediatrician on Monday, March 29. She says she told the doctor that another child in Ronan’s day care had been hospitalized with the potentially deadly bacteria E. coli O157:H7. But Ronan’s symptoms didn’t fit that diagnosis.
The doctor suspected the sandy-haired, hazel-eyed boy had the flu and sent Wilson home with instructions to keep a close eye on him.

Guess Bonnie was supposed to use those magic goggles that let her see bacteria.

Ronan improved briefly, but that Thursday he was back at Evergreen Pediatric Clinic in Vancouver, dehydrated, constipated and so weak he needed help sitting up. The clinic sent him to Southwest Washington Medical Center for tests, and just as he arrived, his symptoms took a horrifying turn — one that, in the end, changed the lives of everyone who knew Ronan Allen "Ro-Ro" Wilson.

On Saturday, a week after their boy’s funeral, Bonnie and Anthony Wilson told their story. They want others to know the loving, curious, ambitious child they lost and to learn from their experience. They don’t want another family to ever endure what they did.

The story goes on to say that a thousand questions remain, including: How did the E. coli outbreak start? Should doctors and public-health officials have done anything differently when children became ill? Will they do anything differently in the future? …

The Wilsons hope that sharing their story will raise awareness about E. coli. They hope doctors and public-health officials will always act swiftly to inform the public about outbreaks. And they wonder whether Ronan might be alive if he’d been diagnosed sooner.
 

Day care with E. coli outbreak still closed

A Vancouver, Wash., day care center remains closed after a deadly outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 killed a 4-year-old boy and sickened three other children.

Turns out the Fletch Family Daycare was closed on April 2 but decided to go ahead and still care for a child.

The center won’t be allowed to reopen – even if health officials clear it – until the state completes its investigation.

An owner said the boy who showed up at the center after it was closed was there for only a short time and there was no risk to him.

Except if investigators don’t know where the E. coli came from, who knows if there was a risk to the kid or not. Why do people say such things?

So sad: child dies in Washington E. coli outbreak

That E. coli O157:H7 outbreak linked to a Vancouver, Washington day care has taken the life of a child.

It’s a little overwhelming as 16-month-old Sorenne nuzzles next to me while trying to go back to sleep. Usually me typing on the computer or talking on the phone bores her into sleepdom.

“We are deeply saddened by the tragic death of this child,” said Dr. Alan Melnick, Clark County Health Officer. “Our hearts go out to the child’s family during this very difficult time.”

Officials said the seven people who work or attend the center displayed signs of E. coli bacteria but haven’t become seriously ill. So far, investigators haven’t been able to identify the source of the bacteria.

In a statement, the day care providers said Friday they’re grieving and are "still overwhelmed by this tragic loss."

Faith-based food safety – god is good version

In a new take on faith-based food safety, Jeff Brown, owner of the Dungeness creamery in Washington state which produces raw milk and was linked to three cases of E. coli illness in Dec. 2009, was quoted as telling the Seattle Times this morning,

"Everything God designed is good for you."

I don’t know who designed small pox, but I don’t want it.

Not sure who designed aflatoxins in food, but don’t want that either.

And I don’t want pathogens in milk, especially when there is an easy technological fix – pasteurization.

The story cites the state Department of Health as saying between 2005 and 2009, 395 Washingtonians with lab-confirmed cases of foodborne pathogens reported consuming raw-milk products shortly before getting sick.

Brown maintains the government has unfairly damaged his farm’s reputation.

"You know how you can tell they’re lying? Their lips are moving. … God designed raw milk; man messed with it. You draw your own conclusions."

Hundreds of DC area restaurants violate health codes

All these stories about local health code violations rarely get to the real issues – what is a critical violation, how is it defined, who decides and why is food safety training so apparently ineffective?

Health inspectors nailed at least 1,900 area restaurants and food vendors — including the swanky Palm and Georgia Brown’s — for violations ranging from rat infestations to "slime"-covered water spigots during a three-month period, according to health department records obtained by The Washington Examiner.

Health inspectors in Virginia, Maryland and the District closed at least 116 area food establishments as a result of major health code infractions.

But hundreds of other restaurants were allowed to remain open, despite racking up critical violations such as expired food and preparing dishes with open wounds. All the violations occurred between Nov. 1 and Feb. 1.

A health inspector observed 11 critical health code violations at Gordon Biersch, which tied Georgia Brown’s for the most among D.C. restaurants during one inspection.

A hand-written report described one barehanded cook "preparing desserts with cuts/sores on fingers," and said employees were cleaning dining utensils and dishes with dirty rags between servings, and using the same pair of tongs to handle cooked and raw food.

And in Virginia, Alexandria’s upscale Brabo by Robert Wiedmaier was cited for 10 critical health code violations during one inspection.

However, Brabo owner and Executive Chef Wiedmaier said the violations — which included kitchen employees drinking from uncovered containers and handling toasted bread with bare hands — did not endanger customers’ health, and the use of the word "critical" was misleading.

"No one’s ever been sick here," he said. "I run clean, professional restaurants, and I pride myself on how people see my kitchens."

How would he know? He wouldn’t.