Category Archives: Raw Milk

New Zealand – Lindsay Farm brand raw (unpasteurised) drinking milk – Campylobacter

MPI

CDC Campy

Image CDC

Product identification
Product type Raw (unpasteurised) drinking milk
Name of product Lindsay Farm brand raw (unpasteurised) drinking milk
Date marking Received on and between 3 July to 11 August 2020.
Package size and description The product is sold in a 2L plastic bottle.
Distribution The product is sold via the following drop off points between Dannevirke and Auckland:

  • Betta Electrical, 46-48 Ruatainwha St, Waipukurau
  • Nature’s Nuture, 100 High St, Waipukurau
  • Otane Hotel, 40 Higginson St, Otane, Central Hawke’s Bay
  • Health Nuts, 26 High St, Dannevirke
  • The Village Green Cafe, 4 Donnelly St, Havelock North
  • Cornucopia Organic Foods, 21 Heretaunga St, East Hastings
  • Health 2000, 227 Gloucester St, Taradale, Napier
  • JJ’s Organics, 232 Riverbend Rd, Onekawa, Napier
  • Marewa Pharmacy, 126/128 Kennedy Rd, Marewa, Napier
  • Tangaroa, Tangaroa St, Ahuriri, Napier
  • Chantal Foods, 45 Hastings St, Napier
  • Berry Tasty, 600 Main North Rd, Napier
  • Mahia Ave Dairy, 24 Mahia Ave, Wairoa
  • M21 Meats, Spagate Shopping Centre, Taupō
  • Makaraka Veges, 97 Main Rd, Gisborne
  • Down to Earth, 131 Ormond Rd, Gisborne
  • Spencer’s, 299 Riddell Rd, Glendowie, Auckland
  • Titirangi Pick Up, 10 Warwick Ave, Titirangi, Auckland
  • IEproduce, 1 Barrys Rd, Takapuna, Auckland.
Notes This recall does not affect any other batches of Lindsay Farm brand raw (unpasteurised) drinking milk.

Consumer advice

Customers are asked to check the batch mark on the product.

If you have purchased any of the affected product listed on this notice, do not consume or alternatively heat to 70°C and hold at this temperature for one minute. If you don’t have a thermometer, heat the milk until it nearly reaches a boil (or scald the milk) before drinking it.

There have been reports of associated illness in New Zealand. If you have consumed any of this product and have any concerns about your health, seek medical advice.

Customers should return the product to their retailer for a full refund.

MPI’s information about Campylobacter

MPI’s advice on how to reduce the risk of illness if you drink raw unpasteurised milk

Who to contact

If you have questions, contact Lindsay Farm:

  • Phone: 06 858 5333
  • Address: Lindsay Road, Waipukurau, Central Hawke’s Bay.

 

Spain – Spain plans to tighten rules for marketing of unpasteurised milk

Food Safety News Raw Milk Food Safety KSW Foodworld

Spanish scientists have proposed additional requirements for the marketing of raw milk but have not gone as far as to ban it.

European regulation allows unpasteurized milk for direct human consumption to be placed on the market without treatment to kill bacteria, parasites and viruses. The current situation in Spain follows this legislation with no additional requirements so raw milk can be sold regardless of volume.

The Spanish Agency for Food Safety and Nutrition (AESAN) asked its Scientific Committee to assess whether risk management measures related to raw milk intended for direct human consumption are adequate to provide a high level of consumer protection. Or if it was necessary to prohibit raw milk sold in this way in Spain.

Proposed measures include microbiological criteria, mandatory packaging of milk and indicating on the label: “Raw milk without thermal treatment: boil before consumption” and “Maintain refrigerated at temperatures between 1 and 4 degrees C (34 to 39 degrees F).Raw Milk Food Safety KSW Foodworld

UK – Cliftons Farm recalls raw milk and raw cream due to contamination with campylobacter

FSA

Cliftons Farm is recalling raw milk and raw cream because campylobacter has been found in the products.

Product details

Cliftons Farm raw milk

Pack size 2 pints
Use by any products purchased on or after 20th June 2020
Cliftons Farm raw cream

Pack size 230 ml
Use by any products purchased on or after 20th June 2020

Risk statement

The presence of campylobacter in the products listed above. The usual symptoms caused by campylobacter are fever, diarrhoea and abdominal cramps.

Action taken by the company

Cliftons Farm is recalling the above products. Point of sale notices are displayed in their shop, on their website and Facebook page. These notices explain to customers why the products are being recalled and tell them what to do if they have bought the product. Please see the attached notice.

Our advice to consumers

If you have bought the above products do not eat them. Instead, dispose of them and contact Cliftons Farm for a full refund at https://cliftonsfarm.com/contact/.

USA – CDFA Announces Recall of Raw Milk Produced at Valley Milk Simply Bottled of Stanislaus County

PASOROBLES PRESS

Raw milk produced and packaged by Valley Milk Simply Bottled of Stanislaus County is the subject of a statewide recall and quarantine order announced by California State Veterinarian Dr. Annette Jones. The quarantine order came following the confirmed detection of the bacteria Campylobacter jejuni in the farm’s packaged raw whole milk sampled and tested by the California Department of Food and Agriculture.

Research – Raw is still risky: Six years after a toddler died, Australian advocates want raw milk back on the table

Barf blog

In late 2014, three children in the Australian state of Victoria developed hemolytic uremic syndrome linked to Shiga-toxin toxin producing E. coli in unpasteurized bath milk produced by Mountain View Dairy Farm. One child died, and two others developed cryptosporidiosis.

The Victorian government quickly banned the sale of so-called bath milk, which although labeled as not fit for human consumption, was a widely recognized way for Australian consumers to access raw milk.

Research- Data shows connection between unpasteurized milk and infections

Food Safety News 

After reviewing details of brucellosis illnesses from recent years, including a 19-state outbreak, researchers are saying their findings show a link between raw milk and such infections.

Although the researchers did not name the dairy farm associated with the multistate  outbreak, the CDC and the FDA investigated the those illnesses, which occurred during the period reviewed by the research team and were connected to raw milk from Miller’s Biodiversity Farm in Pennsylvania.

Information about the researchers’ work was published recently in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, which is posted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The group of researchers, made up of people from the CDC and a number of states’ agencies, says additional study is needed regarding the emerging health dangers of consuming raw milk.

Research -A review of outbreaks of cryptosporidiosis due to unpasteurized milk

Spinger  raw

Abstract

Purpose

This review analysed outbreaks of human cryptosporidiosis due to raw milk. The objective of our study was to highlight and identify underestimated and underreported aspects of transmission of the parasite as well as the added value of genotyping Cryptosporidium isolates.

Methods

We conducted a descriptive literature review using the digital archives Pubmed and Embase. All original papers and case reports referring to outbreaks of Cryptosporidium due to unpasteurized milk were reviewed. The cross-references from these publications were also included.

Results

Outbreaks have been described in the USA, Australia, and the UK. Laboratory evidence of Cryptosporidium from milk specimens was lacking in the majority of the investigations. However, in most recent reports molecular tests on stool specimens along with epidemiological data supported that the infection was acquired through the consumption of unpasteurized milk. As the incubation period for Cryptosporidium is relatively long (days to weeks) compared with many other foodborne pathogens (hours to days), these reports often lack microbiological confirmation because, by the time the outbreak was identified, the possibly contaminated milk was not available anymore.

Conclusion

Cryptosporidiosis is generally considered a waterborne intestinal infection, but several reports on foodborne transmission (including through raw milk) have been reported in the literature. Calves are frequently infected with Cryptosporidium spp., which does not multiply in milk. However, Cryptosporidium oocysts can survive if pasteurization fails. Thus, pasteurization is essential to inactivate oocysts. Although cryptosporidiosis cases acquired from raw milk are seldom reported, the risk should not be underestimated and Cryptosporidium should be considered as a potential agent of contamination. Genotyping Cryptosporidium isolates might be a supportive tool to strengthen epidemiologic evidence as well as to estimate the burden of the disease.

 

Information – France allows changes to raw milk regulations because of coronavirus

This is very interesting in the light of this week RASFF Alert recall for raw milk cheese with Listeria monocytogenes present.

Food Safety News Raw Milk Food Safety KSW Foodworld

French authorities have eased rules around the sale of raw milk because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The country’s Ministry of Agriculture has temporarily adopted measures making it easier for producers to market their unpasteurized, raw milk for direct sale. The agency also made it clear it was the operator’s responsibility to ensure the safety of any product placed on the market.

Sale of raw milk directly to the consumer can happen by completing an online declaration. Normally, the cow, goat or sheep milk producer must request authorization from authorities to be able to sell raw milk and then be subject to an inspection. At the end of the coronavirus crisis, the producer will have to apply if they wish to keep this status.

RASFF Alert – Listeria monocytogenes

RASFF-Logo

RASFF – Listeria monocytogenes (<10 CFU/g) in raw milk cheese (Morbier) from France in France

New Zealand -Campylobacter and E. coli infections climb in New Zealand; raw milk cited

Food Safety News

Campylobacter, Yersinia, E. coli and Listeria infections all went up while Salmonella declined, according to the 2018 report on foodborne disease in New Zealand.

Campylobacter remained the top foodborne pathogen. The country has a performance target to reduce cases of foodborne campylobacteriosis by 10 percent from 88.4 to 79.6 per 100,000 per head of population by the end of 2020. The estimated incidence in 2018 was 78.3 per 100,000.

New Zealand Food Safety (NZFS) is part of the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) and leads the country’s food safety system. EpiSurv is the country’s notifiable disease surveillance system

Full Report Link