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Matt White
09-15-2006, 02:38 PM
http://cdn.news.aol.com/aolnews_photos/07/06/20060915102009990001The Food and Drug Administration asked people not to eat fresh, bagged spinach after an E. coli outbreak was reported earlier this week.

Bacteria Kills One, Sickens Dozens in Nine States
By ANDREW BRIDGES, AP

WASHINGTON (Sept. 15) - Federal health officials worked Friday to find the source of a multistate E. coli outbreak and warned consumers that even washing the suspect spinach won't kill the sometimes-deadly bacteria.

One person died and dozens of others were sickened in the 10-state outbreak, linked by Food and Drug Administration officials to bagged spinach.

"We need to strive to do even better so even one life is not lost," said Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach, FDA's acting commissioner.

The FDA warned people not to eat bagged spinach and said washing it wouldn't solve the problem because the bacteria is too tightly attached.

"If you wash it, it is not going to get rid of it," said Robert Brackett, director of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Nutrition.


E. Coli Facts
· A form of bacteria that lives in the human body; one strain can cause severe illness.
· Present in uncooked beef, unpasteurized milk and juice, and on raw sprouts and lettuce.

The original outbreak was reported Thursday in eight states. Ohio became the ninth Friday, with health officials reporting seven cases - one serious - there.

Meanwhile, supermarkets around the country began pulling packaged spinach from store shelves.

"We pulled everything that we have spinach in," said Dan Brettelle, manager of a Piggly Wiggly store in Columbia, S.C.

Officials believes the spinach may have been grown in California, and federal and state health officials were there trying to pinpoint the source of the contamination.

E. coli is commonly present in animal manure.

Brackett said the use of manure as a fertilizer for produce typically consumed raw, such as spinach, is not in keeping with good agricultural practices. "It is something we don't want to see," he told a food policy conference.

Nine states were reporting a total of 57 cases of E. coli, according to the latest tally Friday.

The death occurred in Wisconsin, where 20 people were reported ill, 11 of them in Milwaukee. The outbreak has sickened others - nine of them seriously - in Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Michigan, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon and Utah. In California, state health officials said they were investigating a possible case there.

The outbreak has affected a mix of ages, but most of the cases have involved women, Acheson said. Further information on the person who died wasn't available.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Wisconsin health officials alerted the FDA about the outbreak at midweek. Preliminary analysis suggested the same strain is responsible for the outbreak in all nine states. Not all strains of the bacteria cause illness.

The warning applied to consumers nationwide because of uncertainty over the origin of the tainted spinach and how widely it was distributed. Health officials did not know of a link to a specific growing region, grower, brand or supplier.

"Typically we would try to narrow it down as focused as we could," Brackett said in an interview. "The fact that it was distributed all over the country, the fact that people are getting seriously ill from this, warranted us to have an abundance of caution and just to say 'OK, stop now until we figure out exactly what's going on."'

Brackett noted that most of the spinach crop at this time of the year comes from California. A special effort is under way in the Salinas Valley of California, a major leafy-vegetable growing region, to look for any possible source of contamination there.

Amy Philpott, a spokeswoman for the United Fresh Produce Association, said that it's possible the cause of the outbreak won't be known for some time, even after its source is determined.

"Our industry is very concerned," she said. "We're taking this very seriously."

Reports of infections have been growing by the day, Acheson said. "We may be at the peak, we may not be," he said.

E. coli causes diarrhea, often with bloody stools. Most healthy adults can recover completely within a week, although some people - including the very young and old - can develop a form of kidney failure that often leads to death.

Anyone who has gotten sick after eating raw packaged spinach should contact a doctor, officials said.

Other bagged vegetables, including prepackaged salads, apparently are not affected. In general, however, washing all bagged vegetables is recommended. Thorough cooking kills the bacterium.

"We're telling people if they have bagged produce and they feel like it's a risk, throw it out," Michigan Department of Community Health spokesman T.J. Bucholz said. "If they feel like they have to eat it, wash it first in warm water."

E. coli lives in the intestines of cattle and other animals and typically is linked to contamination by fecal material. The disease-linked strain of the bacterium causes an estimated 73,000 cases of infection, including 61 deaths, each year in the United States, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Sources of the bacterium include uncooked produce, raw milk, unpasteurized juice, contaminated water and meat, especially undercooked or raw hamburger, the agency says on its Web site.


I remember reading FASTFOOD NATION.....

"...when there is a E. coli breakout...it's because there is SHIT in the food."

Nitro Express
09-15-2006, 02:58 PM
I grow my own spinach. Our food supply is getting so third world because that is where much of the food is being imported from. Pinapple no longer comes from Hawaii, it comes from Indonesia and Tailand. Grapes come from Chile. All sorts of veggies and produce come from Mexico or even China.

In the 1970's the US could feed the whole world. In the 00's we import so much food and have put so much agriculture here our of business we no longer can feed ourselves.

The quality of the produce sucks. I can remember if I was in Sacremento, California I could get fresh fruit that was to die for. Vine and tree ripened. Now the stuff is picked green and gassed. Nothing has any natural sugar or flavor.

Dyes and chemicals are added to our meat to make it look and taste better.

Genetic engineering of food is giving people new food allergies. Gentic engineered plants are now cross breeding with non engineered plants and contaminating the whole crop. This is so alarming that Norway has taken old unengineered seed and locked them away in a climate controled vault incase we screw ourselves out of a food supply.

Our food is imported from countris that use human waste as fertilizer and still use DDT and other pesticides that we eat.

Sure we have laws in the US but our imported food isn't regulated and our politicians want to make us even more dependant on shit salad to eat.

Got shit in your salad? Thank NAFTA and the Bush family.

Little Texan
09-15-2006, 09:28 PM
I just bought a bag of baby spinach at Kroger a few days ago. I'm not going to eat it raw, but use it on a pizza I'm going to cook, so I guess the shit spinach won't hurt me if it's cooked.

ThrillsNSpills
09-16-2006, 01:02 PM
http://www.cuckoocomics.com/animation_art/poster/Popeye.jpg

oh i gots a virusk

thome
09-16-2006, 01:29 PM
The less your food is handled the better.

I have some friends who by plastic bags of lettuce and other such items and i have always shy-ed away from such things -it is just such a hassle to buy a whole head of lettuce wash it and put it away-.

Well some one, maybe five extra people have touched your lettuce to
pick it up, break it apart ,separate it into sizes and put it in bags.

I am not saying all companies who provide such a product are dirty i
am just saying all my cosideration goes into who and how many have handled my raw foods.

when i can afford it buy a whole slab of sirlion steaks uncut, its
about 70.00$ and cut them myself into whatever size thickness 8 to 12
steaks are the norm for my cut plus all the trimmings get frozen and go into a stew or chili.
You have to frreze most of it but less people are touching my meat.

Wash all washable foods when you bring them home then into the fridge.Don't put it into the fridge and wash it as you need it.
this was taught to me by a old school ladie and i figure from back in the days of little or no refridgeration those folks knew what to do.

I still think this country has the best foods .

Matt White
09-16-2006, 11:19 PM
Washing will NOT kill the E. coli bacteria....

Our country should do a MUCH better job of enforcing CLEAN & SAFE food regulations....

It's 2006...not 1406....it's fucking BULLSHIT to have people dying from food that isn't safe to consume......