Category Archives: foodborne outbreak

UK – Wales – Salmonella: Wrexham food poisoning cluster sparks investigation

BBC Wales

A salmonella cluster in Wrexham has prompted an investigation to find the cause and prevent further cases.

Public Health Wales (PHW) is working with Wrexham council’s environmental health team and Betsi Cadwaladr health board to investigate.

PHW said the strain Salmonella Typhimurium can cause bloody diarrhoea, vomiting and stomach pain.

Most people who contract the bug usually recover but complications can occur among frail or very young people.

PHW has asked anyone who is worried about their health to call their GP or NHS Direct Wales on 111

USA – 29 sick, 6 hospitalized in outbreak at Washington care facility

Food Safety News

Public health officials in Seattle are investigating a Salmonella outbreak that has sickened more than two dozen residents of a long-term care facility.

“Based on the investigation, this outbreak was likely due to contaminated food served at the facility,” according to an outbreak announcement this afternoon from Public Health Seattle & King County. The department did not report what food was involved.

The public health department has identified 29 people as outbreak patients. Six of them have had to be admitted to hospitals, but no one has died. The outbreak has concluded, according to the health department

Illness onsets appear to have been July 1 through July 5. No ill food workers were identified as patients as of today. The public health department said the facility is not typically open to the public.

USA – FDA – Investigations of Foodborne Illness Outbreaks

FDA

What’s New

  • For the outbreak of Cyclospora cayetanensis (ref #1171), the case count has increased from 39 to 47 cases.
  • For the outbreak of Cyclospora cayetanensis (ref #1163), the case count has increased from 121 to 140 cases.
  • For the outbreak of Salmonella Paratyphi B var. L(+) tartrate+ (ref #1157), the case count has increased from 35 to 36 cases.
  • For the outbreak of Cyclospora cayetanensis (ref #1159), the case count has increased from 68 to 69 cases.

Research – Outbreaks and illnesses rose in Belgium in 2022

Food Safety News

The number of outbreaks and people sick in them was higher in 2022 than the year before, according to the Belgian food agency.

Belgium recorded 830 outbreaks in 2022 compared to 547 in 2021, with 4,247 people affected compared to 2,070 in 2021. In 2022, 125 people were hospitalized, and two died.

The rise may partly be because of increased activity in the hospitality, restaurant, and catering sector after large closures because of COVID-19. The various incidents, such as Salmonella contamination at Ferrero, may also have raised consumer awareness and encouraged them to report illnesses, said the Federal Agency for the Safety of the Food Chain (FASFC).

UK – Rare E. coli type behind deadly UK outbreak; 2 dozen sick – E.coli O183

Food Safety News

One person has died in an E. coli outbreak being investigated by health authorities in the United Kingdom.

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) and UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) are trying to find the source of the ongoing Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) O183 outbreak with the help of other public health agencies.

There are 24 cases in the UK, with 19 in England, two each in Northern Ireland and Scotland, and one in Wales since May. For patients with available information, onset dates range from May 23 to July 2.

UK – FSA CALLS FOR INDUSTRY ASSISTANCE WITH ONGOING INVESTIGATION OF STEC OUTBREAK – O183

BFFF

The FSA have asked us to raise awareness of an ongoing outbreak of Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) O183 t5.5, they are investigating along with UKHSA and the involvement of all public health authorities across the UK as well as the ROI.

Note: This outbreak may not be linked directly to your sector, but you are encouraged to get in touch with the FSA should you be able to provide any information of interest to this investigation.

Germany – ‘Caciotta – Caciotta’, unwrapped cheese wheels, 400 g – Foodborne Outbreak -STEC E.coli O26

LMW

Alert type: Groceries
Date of first publication:

07/28/2023

Product name:

‘Caciotta – Caciotta’, unwrapped cheese wheels, 400 g

Manufacturer (distributor):

farm in Malga di Coredo, in the province of Trento, Italy

Reason for warning:

foodborne disease outbreak HUS (hemolytic uremic syndrome) caused by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli O26 (STEC)

Packaging Unit: á 400 g, total net weight: 20 kg, 50 units
Durability: not specified
Production date: not specified
Lot identification: 24623 and 17623
Additional Information:

Goods that were sold directly to end consumers before July 14, 2023 are affected. It cannot be ruled out that the product concerned was also bought by tourists.

Do not consume this product. If you experience symptoms such as diarrhoea, vomiting, severe abdominal pain, drowsiness, reduced urine production (anuria) and weakness and lack of energy (asthenia), please contact a doctor.

BVL Email:

poststelle@bvl.bund.de

RASFF Alert – Suspected botulism due to fresh potato tortilla from Spain

RASFF

Suspected botulism due to fresh potato tortilla from Spain in Andorra, France , Italy and Portugal

EFSA – Multi-country outbreak of Salmonella Senftenberg ST14 infections possibly linked to cherry like tomatoes

EFSA

Abstract

Since August 2022 and as of 12 July 2023, 92 cases of Salmonella Senftenberg have been reported in Austria (5), Belgium (4), Czechia (4), Estonia (1), Finland (12), France (16), Germany (26), Ireland (1), the Netherlands (5), Norway (1), Sweden (11), the United Kingdom (4), and the United States (2). In total, 69.6% of the reported cases were female. One patient has died of the infection. The first case was reported in France with an isolation date of 22 August 2022 and the most recent case was reported on 24 June 2023 in Sweden. Most cases were reported between October 2022 and March 2023, with a decline in the number of countries with exposures after December. In Austria, Germany, and France, cherry-like tomatoes were identified as the food exposure most reported by interviewed cases. The outbreak strain was detected in France from a mixed salad dish, containing cherry tomatoes and green leafy vegetables, prepared on 17 August 2022 but not served. Tomatoes from the salad in France and tomatoes in Austria were suspected as the vehicle of infections by national authorities and were traced back to wholesalers in Germany, the Netherlands and Spain, and to growers in the Netherlands, Spain and Morocco. In the absence of microbiological evidence from the tomatoes, the source of the infections could not be established. The genetic similarity of the human outbreak strains suggests a likely common source(s) causing a prolonged, cross-border food-borne outbreak with cases intermittently reported in 11 EU/EEA countries, the UK, and the US for about 10 months. The contamination may have originated from farms growing tomatoes. Since December 2022, as the number of cases has declined, the risk of new infections has decreased to a low level.

Sweden – Fish suspected in deadly Swedish Listeria outbreak

Food Safety News

Three people have died in Sweden as part of a Listeria outbreak that may have been caused by smoked fish.

Folkhälsomyndigheten (the Public Health Agency of Sweden) said deaths of three of the older patients were connected to their Listeria infections but it is not clear if they died with or because of listeriosis.

From the end of May to the beginning of July, 10 people contracted Listeria infections caused by the same type of the bacteria. Another four people fell ill in late 2022 from this strain.

Patients are 10 men and four women aged 63 to 93 years old. They live in eight different regions in the country.

Based on information from a questionnaire given to patients about foods they ate before becoming sick, many reported eating gravad or cold-smoked salmon but the exact product that caused the outbreak is not yet clear.