Category Archives: Food Microbiology

New Zealand -Public health warning: shellfish biotoxin alert for Raglan coastline

MPI

New Zealand Food Safety today issued a public health warning advising the public not to collect or consume shellfish harvested from the Raglan coastline.

The warning extends from Port Waikato, southward to Tauratahi Point at the entrance of Kawhia Harbour. The warning includes the entire Raglan and Aotea Harbours but not Kawhia Harbour. Paralytic Shellfish Toxins have been detected in shellfish from Raglan at levels above the safe limit set by MPI.

Mussels, oysters, tuatua, pipi, toheroa, cockles, scallops, catseyes, kina (sea urchin) and all other bivalve shellfish should not be eaten.

Note that cooking shellfish does not remove the toxin.

Pāua, crab and crayfish may still be eaten if the gut has been completely removed prior to cooking, as toxins accumulate in the gut. If the gut is not removed, its contents could contaminate the meat during the cooking process.

Symptoms typically appear between 10 minutes and 3 hours after ingestion and may include:

  • numbness and a tingling (prickly feeling) around the mouth, face, and extremities (hands and feet)
  • difficulty swallowing or breathing
  • dizziness
  • headache
  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • diarrhoea
  • paralysis and respiratory failure and in severe cases, death.

If anyone becomes ill after eating shellfish from an area where a public health warning has been issued, phone Healthline for advice on 0800 61 11 16, or seek medical attention immediately. You are also advised to contact your nearest public health unit and keep any leftover shellfish in case it can be tested.

Monitoring of toxin levels will continue and any changes will be communicated accordingly. Commercially harvested shellfish – sold in shops and supermarkets, or exported – is subject to strict water and flesh monitoring programmes by MPI to ensure they are safe to eat.

France – Emergency Serious food poisoning: 10 cases of botulism, including 8 hospitalized and 1 death, linked to visiting a restaurant in Bordeaux

Sante Publique

kswfoodworld

The health authorities, in conjunction with Public Health France and the National Reference Center for Botulism (Institut Pasteur) recommend that people who have visited the Bordeaux establishment Tchin Tchin Wine Bar (3 Rue Emile Duployé, 33000 Bordeaux) between Monday 4 and Sunday September 10, 2023 to consult a doctor urgently or to contact the 15th, mentioning cases of botulism, in the event of symptoms appearing after this attendance.

The people concerned all frequented the same restaurant-bar in Bordeaux, the Tchin Tchin Wine Bar, over the last week. The suspected foods are at this stage canned sardines in oil homemade by the restaurateur and served between September 4 and 10, 2023 in this Bordeaux restaurant. 

Botulism is a serious disease (fatal in 5 to 10% of cases) whose incubation time can range from a few hours to a few days. 
Symptoms include, to varying degrees: early digestive signs which may be fleeting (abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea), eye damage (failure to accommodate, blurred or double vision), dry mouth accompanied by a lack of swallowing or even speech, or neurological symptoms (wrong paths, more or less severe paralysis of the muscles). There is usually no fever.

If you have symptoms, consult a doctor urgently or contact 15, mentioning cases of botulism.

What are the possible sources of contamination?

Botulism is a serious neurological condition caused by a very potent toxin produced by the bacteria Clostridium botulinum. It develops particularly in poorly preserved foods. In France, the majority of cases of botulism correspond to food poisoning, by ingestion of the toxin produced by C. botulinum in preserved foods that have not undergone an extensive sterilization process: cured meats, cold meats or even family-made preserves. or artisanal.

It is the extremely powerful toxin that it synthesizes that is responsible for the disease.

France REFRIGERATED COOKED SHRIMP CALIBER 40/60 RED LABEL – MADAGASCAR – Listeria monocytogenes

Gov france

  • Product category Food
  • Product subcategory Fishing and aquaculture products
  • Product brand name/
  • Model names or references WHOLE COOKED SHRIMP LABEL ROUGE 40/60 – MADAGASCAR SOLD TO CUSTOMERS AND RETAIL SALE FROM 08/23 TO 09/04/2023
  • Product identification
    GTIN Batch Date
    3700156964160 323511 Use-by date 04/09/2023
  • Products List ProductList.pdfAttachment
  • Packaging Shrimp sold in trays
  • Start/end date of marketing From 08/24/2023 to 08/27/2023
  • Storage temperature Product to keep in the refrigerator
  • Health mark/
  • Further information The packaging date is indicated on the bag label
  • Geographical sales area Whole France
  • Distributors TIBIDY + Retail sales (Viviers de Saint-Colomban)
  • List of points of sale Customer_delivery.pdf

France – Voscarini Hugo Frizzante white 0.75 liters – Fermentation

LMW

Alert type: Groceries
Date of first publication: September 13, 2023
Product name: Voscarini Hugo Frizzante white 0.75 liters
Product images:

Product image.png
Manufacturer (distributor):

Manufacturer: Hauser Weinimport GmbH distributed through Kaufland

Reason for warning:

Possibility of subsequent fermentation and bursting of the affected bottles

Packaging Unit: 0.75 liters
Lot identification: starting with L6962…
Additional Information:

Reference is made to the company’s attached press release.

France – Béarnaise pudding – Listeria monocytogenes

Gov france

  • Product category Food
  • Product subcategory Meats
  • Product brand name Ossaloise style Mr Pomme Saint Gaudens
  • Model names or references Béarnaise pudding
  • Product identification
    Batch Date
    2331 Use-by date between 08/05/2023 and 09/14/2023
  • Packaging vacuum packed in the traditional charcuterie section
  • Start/end date of marketing From 08/22/2023 to 08/25/2023
  • Storage temperature Product to keep in the refrigerator
  • Health mark FR 64062002 CE
  • Geographical sales area Benejacq
  • Distributors Super U

USA – Mishandled rice sickens at least 28 people at Suffolk County restaurant

ABC7NY

STONY BROOK, New York (WABC) — More than two dozen people got sick from a likely food poisoning incident at a restaurant in Suffolk County.

It happened at “Kumo Sushi & Steakhouse” in Stony Brook on Saturday.

Of the 28 people sickened, 12 had to be taken to the hospital.

The County Health Department says the people were likely sickened by mishandled and improperly stored rice.

The department issued 15 violations to the restaurant including eight for foodborne illness risk factors.

USA – Man dies after contracting Vibrio vulnificus bacteria from fresh oysters in Texas restaurant

Detroit Free Press

Food Illness

The consumption of raw oysters at a Texas restaurant led to the untimely death of a relatively healthy man in his 30s.

The man, contracted a bacterial infection known as Vibrio vulnificus that thrives in warm coastal waters. Bacterial infections like this one are on the rise as water temperature continues to increase in response to climate change.

Vibrio vulnificus bacteria can be found in raw or undercooked seafood, but also naturally occurs in saltwater and brackish water.

You can be infected with Vibrio when an open wound comes into contact with raw or undercooked seafood, its juices, or its drippings or with saltwater or brackish water, the CDC reported.

Microbiology Professor Brett Finlay on the process of lab testing with food safety investigations

CBC

Parents affected by the Calgary area daycare E. coli outbreak continue to be frustrated with the lack of information from health officials and how long it’s taking for results to be published from AHS’s investigation into the central kitchen. University of British Columbia Microbiology Professor Brett Finlay talks about the process.

Canada- Patient count exceeds 225 in E. coli O157 outbreak linked to daycare centers

Food Safety News

The patient count in an E. coli outbreak linked to daycare centers in Calgary, Canada, now stands at 231.

Alberta Health Services officials say 26 of the sick are currently hospitalized, 25 of them children and one adult. Eleven other children have already been discharged from hospitals. Twenty-one children have hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) which is a type of kidney failure that also affects other organs.

A specific food has not been identified as the source of the E. coli O157:H7, but investigators have collected samples of leftovers and frozen food for testing. Eleven daycare centers that share a common kitchen were closed.

The central kitchen that serves the 11 daycare centers remains closed.

Four daycare centers were given permission to reopen Monday. The four centers did not have any illnesses linked to the outbreak. The remaining seven will be allowed to reopen Tuesday. Staff and daycare attendees from those seven centers must test negative before returning to any daycare center, according to Alberta Health Services.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has asked the provincial health minister and the provincial minister for children and family services to investigate the outbreak and provide a full assessment of the situation.

Critical food-handling violations found at Fueling Minds central kitchen in Calgary—Updated – STEC E.coli O157

EFOOD ALERT

The central kitchen that supplied food to eleven daycare centers in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, was in violation of several fundamental safe food-handling practices, according to a report released by Alberta Health Services (AHS).

The kitchen was ordered closed on September 4, 2023, and was inspected by the AHS the following day.

The KidsU Centennial – Fueling Minds Inc. central kitchen was linked to an outbreak of E. coli O157 infections that has infected at least 264 individuals as of September 12, 2023, and sent 37 of them to hospital.

Eleven of the hospitalized victims have been released. Twenty-five individuals remain in hospital, and 22 of those patients are suffering from haemolytic uremic syndrome, or HUS. Six patients are receiving peritoneal dialysis.

The Fueling Minds kitchen supplied food to eleven daycare centers in the Calgary area. All of the centers were ordered closed pending cleaning, sanitation and inspection. All of them have now been allowed to reopen.