Category Archives: Food Virus

Europe – German 2012 – Norovirus Oubreak Report

Eurosurveillance Norwalk_Caspid

From 20 September through 5 October 2012, the largest recorded food-borne outbreak in Germany occurred. Norovirus was identified as the causative agent. We conducted four analytical epidemiological studies, two case–control studies and two surveys (in total 150 cases) in secondary schools in three different federal states. Overall, 390 institutions in five federal states reported nearly 11,000 cases of gastroenteritis. They were predominantly schools and childcare facilities and were supplied almost exclusively by one large catering company. The analytical epidemiological studies consistently identified dishes containing strawberries as the most likely vehicle, with estimated odds ratios ranging from 2.6 to 45.4. The dishes had been prepared in different regional kitchens of the catering company and were served in the schools two days before the peaks of the respective outbreaks. All affected institutions had received strawberries of one lot, imported frozen from China. The outbreak vehicle was identified within a week, which led to a timely recall and prevented more than half of the lot from reaching the consumer. This outbreak exemplifies the risk of large outbreaks in the era of global food trade. It underlines the importance of timely surveillance and epidemiological outbreak investigations for food safety.

RASFF Alerts – Norovirus – Cooked Clams

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RASFF -norovirus in frozen cooked clams from Vietnam in Spain

Norway CO-OP Recall Frozen Wild Berries – Norovirus

HACCP EuropeNorovirus

Coop Norway is recalling Coop Wild Berry (Coop Skogsbær) because some of the batches may be contaminated with norovirus. Norovirus can cause acute onset of nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and watery diarrhea, and in addition, some flu-like symptoms such as fever, muscle and joint aches and headaches. The symptoms usually last from one to three days.

The recalled product is frozen Coop Wild Berry (Coop Skogsbær) packed in 300g packs with packing dates: 30.10.2013 , 13.11.2013 and 20.11.2013.

For more information consumers may contact Coop: ph. 22 89 95 95.

Coop Norway is recalling Coop Wild Berry (Coop Skogsbær) because some of the batches may be contaminated with norovirus. Norovirus can cause acute onset of nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and watery diarrhea, and in addition, some flu-like symptoms such as fever, muscle and joint aches and headaches. The symptoms usually last from one to three days.

The recalled product is frozen Coop Wild Berry (Coop Skogsbær) packed in 300g packs with packing dates: 30.10.2013 , 13.11.2013 and 20.11.2013.

For more information consumers may contact Coop: ph. 22 89 95 95.

RASFF Alert – Norovirus – Live Clams

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RASFF – norovirus in live clams (Ruditapes decussatus) from Tunisia in Itaky

RASFF Alerts – Norovirus – Raw Calms from Tunisia in Italy

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RASFF -norovirus (present) in chilled clams (Ruditapes decussatus) from Tunisia in Italy

RASFF -norovirus (present) in chilled clams (Ruditapes decussatus) from Tunisia in Italy

RASFF-norovirus (present) in chilled clams (Ruditapes decussatus) from Tunisia in Italy

RASFF -norovirus (present) in chilled clams (Ruditapes decussatus) from Tunisia in Italy

USA – Another Cruise Ship Norovirus Outbreak

Food Poisoning JournalNorwalk_Caspid

Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.’s ship Explorer of the Seas is returning two days early to its New Jersey port after a stomach illness struck more than 600 people out of about 4,200 onboard, NBC News reported late Sunday. The 564 passengers and 47 crew members on the 10-day cruise to the U.S. Virgin Islands reported symptoms suggesting a possible norovirus outbreak, the report said, citing an official with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The incident follows the outbreak of a gastrointestinal illness aboard another ship earlier this month.

Food Poisoning Journal

NBC News reports that U.S. health officials are expected to board a Royal Caribbean cruise ship in the Virgin Islands on Sunday to investigate a possible outbreak of highly contagious norovirus that has sickened more than 300 passengers and crew members.

The Explorer of the Seas ship stopped part way through a 10-day cruise from Cape Liberty, N.J., to the Caribbean island of St. Maarten after reports of vomiting and diarrhea, according to the cruise line and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Japan- Norovirus Outbreak in Bread – 1000 Cases

Japanese TimesEurofins

Bread maker Hofuku, which has admitted one of its products is probably responsible for causing more than 1,000 children in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka Prefecture, to suffer food poisoning, has started recalling its products from retailers, including supermarkets in Yamanashi, Shizuoka, Aichi and Okayama prefectures.

According to the Hamamatsu Municipal Government, the bread the local company produced Monday and delivered to schools Tuesday morning is likely to have been tainted with the norovirus.

Japanese News

Three female workers at a Higashi Ward, Hamamatsu, bakery were identified as carriers of norovirus.

The bakery is suspected to have been the cause of a mass food poisoning that affected many primary schools in the city, according to the Hamamatsu city government.

The city government announced Sunday that workers at Hofuku, a company that produced bread deemed to be the cause of the norovirus outbreak, were found to be infected with the virus.

RASFF Alerts – Bacillus cereus – Herbs – E.coli – Mussels – Norovirus – Oysters

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RASFF -Bacillus cereus (4.8 10E5; 1.5 10E5 CFU/g) in aromatic herbs mix from Germany in France

RASFF -high count of Escherichia coli (330 MPN/100g) in mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) from Spain in Italy

RASFF-norovirus in fresh oysters from Spain in France

USA – Food Sickness Outbreak in December was Norovirus – 282 People

Food Poisoning BulletinNorwalk_Caspid

Norovirus was the cause of a December food poisoning outbreak that sickened 282 people who ate at a Jimmy John’s restaurant in Garden City, Kansas, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) has confirmed.  State and county officials worked together to determine the source of the outbreak which sickened customers who visited the restaurant from December 10 to December 24.

The restaurant was inspected by the Kansas Department of Agriculture on December 18 and again on December 24. It closed voluntarily from December 24 through December 26 to clean and disinfect the restaurant

USA – Norovirus Outbreak – Oysters

Food Poisoning JournalVibrio

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers not to eat raw or partially cooked oysters harvested from Copano Bay, in Aransas County, Texas, harvested between Dec. 26, 2013 and Jan. 9, 2014.

Oysters harvested from Copano Bay, Texas, on Dec. 26, 2013, and then shipped by Alby’s Seafood of Fulton, Texas, have been linked to six norovirus illnesses in Louisiana.

The Texas Department of State Health Services closed Copano Bay to shellfish harvesting on Jan. 9, 2014.

The FDA is warning consumers not to eat raw or partially cooked shellfish from Copano Bay, in Aransas County, Texas, harvested between Dec. 26, 2013 and Jan. 9, 2014.

Alby’s Seafood disclaimer icon has issued a recall of the oysters harvested on Dec. 26; however, other shellfish harvested from Copano Bay before it was closed may still be in the marketplace.