Category Archives: Hygiene

USA – Vibrio Outbreak Raw Oysters

Food Poisoning BulletinVibrio

Vibrio outbreak associated with eating raw oysters and raw clams has sickened at least 104 people in 13 states over the last six months, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Six people have been hospitalized.

Public health investigators have traced the source of some of these illnesses to shellfish harvest areas in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, and Virginia. Massachusetts issued a recall of oysters,  Connecticut issued a recall of oysters and clams. Implicated harvest areas in Virginia were closed in July and remain closed.  In Massachusetts, they were closed in August and remain closed. In New York they were closed in June and reopened in mid-September. In Connecticut, they were closed in August and reopened in mid-September.

RASFF Alerts – Listeria monocytogenes – Meat Spread – Chilli Sausage – Speck

RASFF -Listeria monocytogenes (presence /25g) in onion flavoured meat spread from Poland

RASFF -Listeria monocytogenes (presence /25g) in chilled chili sausage from Poland

RASFF -Listeria monocytogenes (>1500 CFU/100g) in chilled speck from Italy in France

 

RASFF Alerts – Animal Feed – Salmonella – Soy Bean – Animal Protein

RASFF -Salmonella Senftenberg (in 2 out of 10 /25g) and Salmonella Tennessee (in 1 out of 10 /25g) in soybean meal from Italy in Austria

RASFF – Salmonella Montevideo (present /25g), Salmonella Oranienburg (presenr /25g) and Salmonella Senftenberg (present /25g) in soy bean meal from Italy in Austria

RASFF -Salmonella Rissen (presence /25g) in processed animal proteins (pork) from France in Belgium

HPA Scotland – Contaminated Water Tanks

HPAS

A recent Estates and Facilities Alert issued by Health Facilities Scotland (HFS) has noted that contamination of water supplies was found in two recent projects within NHS Scotland. Extensive testing traced the source to the cold water storage tanks which gave TVC (Total Viable Count) readings for Pseudomonas in excess of 500cfu/100ml (after 72-hour incubation). TVC readings fell to 0cfu/100ml immediately after disinfecting the tanks but had reverted to high levels at later re-testing.

RASFF Alerts – E.coli – Mint Leaves – Warty Venus – Mussels

RASFF -high count of Escherichia coli (1100 CFU/g) in fresh mint leaves from Cambodia in Norway

RASFF -high count of Escherichia coli (930 MPN/100g) in warty venus (Venus verrucosa) from Croatia in italy

RASFF -too high count of Escherichia coli (260 MPN/100g) in live mussels from France

Research – Inactivation of Human Norovirus using Chemical Sanitizers

Norwalk_CaspidScience Direct

The porcine gastric mucin binding magnetic bead (PGM-MB) assay was used to evaluate the ability of chlorine, chlorine dioxide, peroxyacetic acid, hydrogen peroxide, and trisodium phosphate to inactivate human norovirus within 10% stool filtrate. One-min free chlorine treatments at concentrations of 33 and 189 ppm reduced virus binding in the PGM-MB assay by 1.48 and 4.14 log10, respectively, suggesting that chlorine is an efficient sanitizer for inactivation of human norovirus (HuNoV). Five min treatments with 5% trisodium phosphate (pH ~ 12) reduced HuNoV binding by 1.6 log10, suggesting that TSP, or some other high pH buffer, could be used to treat food and food contact surfaces to reduce HuNoV. One min treatments with 350 ppm chlorine dioxide dissolved in water did not reduce PGM-MB binding, suggesting that the sanitizer may not be suitable for HuNoV inactivation in liquid form. However a 60-min treatment with 350 ppm chlorine dioxide did reduce human norovirus by 2.8 log10, indicating that chlorine dioxide had some, albeit limited, activity against HuNoV. Results also suggest that peroxyacetic acid has limited effectiveness against human norovirus, since 1-min treatments with up to 195 ppm reduced human norovirus binding by < 1 log10. Hydrogen peroxide (4%) treatment of up to 60 min resulted in minimal binding reduction (~ 0.1 log10) suggesting that H2O2 is not a good liquid sanitizer for HuNoV. Overall this study suggests that HuNoV is remarkably resistant to several commonly used disinfectants and advocates for the use of chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) as a HuNoV disinfectant wherever possible.

Canada – Government of Canada announces plans to strengthen food safety enforcement

CFIA

November 21, 2013, Ottawa: Today, the Honourable Rona Ambrose, Minister of Health, announced the intention to introduce new penalties for businesses that fail to respect Canadian meat safety requirements.

“Consumers want a strong and reliable food inspection system on which they can depend to provide safe food,” said Minister Ambrose. “Introducing these new penalties demonstrates our commitment to ensuring that Canada’s stringent food safety requirements are being followed.”

These fines, known as Administrative Monetary Penalties (AMPs), provide Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) inspectors with an additional enforcement option when working with the meat industry. For example, they may be applied if a company withholds information, such as a positive E. coli test result, or records that are needed as part of a food safety investigation, or if a company is regularly identified for not complying with requirements.

Strict fines for food safety violations are another step the Government of Canada is taking to protect consumers. The Healthy and Safe Food for Canadians Framework outlines additional activities being undertaken by the CFIA and its federal food safety partners, Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada.

USA -CDC Update Foster Farms Salmonella Outbreak

CDCE.coli O157

As of November 15, 2013, a total of 389 persons infected with seven outbreak strains of Salmonella Heidelberg have been reported from 23 states and Puerto Rico.

40% of ill persons have been hospitalized, and no deaths have been reported.

Most ill persons (74%) have been reported from California.

Epidemiologic, laboratory, and traceback investigations conducted  by local, state, and federal officials indicate that consumption of Foster  Farms brand chicken is the likely source of this outbreak of Salmonella Heidelberg infections.

Canada – Recall – Garlic Powder – Salmonella

CFIAEurofins Food Testing UK

Loblaw Companies Limited is recalling Suraj brand Garlic Powder from the marketplace due to possible Salmonella contamination. Consumers should not consume the recalled product described below.

The following product has been sold nationally.

 Recalled products

Brand Name Common Name Size UPC Additional Info
Suraj Garlic Powder 400 g 0 57197 37238 0 Best Before 2015 AL 22

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella – Meat Ball – Turkey Meat – Paan Leaves – Chicken Kebab – Clams

RASFF -Salmonella typhimurium (presence /25g) in frozen meat ball mass from Lithuania in Latvia

RASFF -Salmonella Hadar (presence /25g) in frozen turkey meat preparations from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF -Salmonella spp. in paan leaves from Bangladesh in the UK

RASFF -Salmonella group C1 (present /25g) in fresh chicken fillets from the Czech Republic

RASFF -Salmonella infantis (presence /25g) in frozen chicken kebab from the Czech Republic, with raw material from Poland

RASFF -Salmonella Javiana (present /25g) in rice paddy herb from Vietnam in Norway

RASFF -Salmonella in frozen ark clams from Vietnam