Category Archives: Salmonella in Chicken

Belgium – Belgian Quality brand chicken sausages -Salmonella

AFSCA

Aldi recall
Product: Belgian Quality brand chicken sausages.
Problem: possible presence of Salmonella.


PRODUCT DESCRIPTION Product

name: CHICKEN SAUSAGES
Brand: Belgian Quality
EAN code: 200703003855
Expiration date: 02/04/2023
Batch number: 217208
Type of packaging: plastic tray
Weight: 600g
Sale period: from 24/ 03/2023 to 31/03/2023
Points of sale: ALDI stores

REASON FOR THE RECALL

Possible presence of Salmonella in the above article.
In consultation with the FASFC, we have therefore decided to withdraw this product from the market and to recall it to our customers. No other ALDI products are affected by this recall.

DESCRIPTION OF THE RISK

Possible symptoms of salmonella poisoning are: fever, abdominal cramps and diarrhea within 12 to 48 hours of eating the contaminated food. The risk of infection is higher in the elderly, children, pregnant women and immunocompromised people.

Have you consumed this product and do you have these symptoms? Consult your GP and explain that you have consumed this product.

PRACTICAL INFORMATION

Please do not consume the product and return it to the store.
Returned products will be refunded (also without receipt). For any additional information, you can contact serviceclients@aldi.be .

Luxembourg – EMO BRAND CHICKEN LEG – Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella

SAP

EMO Distribution S.à.rl is recalling the following product in Luxembourg:

Name Chicken thigh
Brand emo
Unit Sale at the counter without packaging
Sale period from 27.03. at 31.03.2023
Use-by date (DLC) 04.04.2023
Batch 3124005

Danger  : Presence of Listeria and Salmonella

Listeria monocytogenes

Listeria monocytogenes can cause fever, headache and gastroenteritis. Vulnerable people such as immunocompromised and elderly people and young children may present with neurological symptoms due to meningitis. Pregnant women should also be especially alert to these symptoms. Gastroenteritis can appear between a few hours and 3 days after consumption, while neurological symptoms can only appear after 3 months. People who have consumed these products and have these symptoms are invited to consult a doctor and report this consumption to him.

Salmonella

Salmonella can cause symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, diarrhea, fever and headache within 6 to 72 hours after consumption. These symptoms may be aggravated in young children, immunocompromised subjects and the elderly. People who have consumed these products and have these symptoms are invited to consult a doctor and report this consumption to him.

Sale confirmed in Luxembourg by: Emo

Information Source: Emo Recall Notification

Research – Multi-country outbreak of Salmonella Virchow ST16 infections linked to the consumption of meat products containing chicken meat

EFSA

Abstract

Since June 2017, a persistent cross-border outbreak of Salmonella Virchow ST16 has been ongoing in five European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) countries, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United States (US). A total of 210 cases have been reported from the following countries: Denmark (2), France (111), Germany (26), Ireland (4), the Netherlands (34), the UK (32), and the US (1). Among the interviewed cases (55), hospitalisation rates ranged from 16.7% (2/12) in the UK, to 29.4% (5/17) and 38.5% (10/26) in France and Germany, respectively. No deaths have been reported. A majority of cases have been linked to local restaurants serving kebab meat. The number of confirmed cases represents only a small proportion of all infections in the EU/EEA, partly due to the varying sequencing capacities of countries.

The comparison of the representative outbreak strains with the available genome profiles of S. Virchow ST16 from non-human isolates, revealed that most of the matching isolates belonged to broiler meat and broiler-related environments, thereby supporting the hypothesis of chicken meat as a vehicle of infections.

The available information from case interviews, traceback investigations, and whole genome sequencing (WGS) cluster analysis, showed that kebab meat products containing contaminated chicken meat are the likely vehicles of infections, and that the clone has been circulating in the EU poultry meat production chain at least in France, Germany, and the Netherlands. In the absence of batch numbers of the contaminated kebab products and related Salmonella testing information, the source(s) of the infections could not be established.

New infections are likely to occur in the EU/EEA affecting any age group, until further investigations are performed to identify the source(s) and point(s) of contamination along the chicken meat production chain, including the primary production upstream lines. This will allow appropriate control measures to be implemented.

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella – Polish Chicken Products – Betel Leaves -Brazilian Chicken Products – Chicken Thigh Fillet – Chilled and Frozen Turkey Products – Organic Tahini- Beef Tartar Sausage

RASFF

Salmonella enteritidis in frozen raw chicken fillets from Poland in France

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in chicken thigh fillet with skin from Romania in Hungary

RASFF

Salmonella in betel leaves from India in France

RASFF

Salmonella (presence /25g) in frozen marinated chicken breast fillets from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF

Salmonella present in 25g in chicken meat preparation in the Netherlands

RASFF

Salmonella Enteritidis (in 25 g in 1 of 5 samples) in chicken fillet from Poland in the UK

RASFF

Salmonella in chicken meat preparation from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF

Salmonella Typhimurium in chilled and frozen turkey meat products from Hungary in Romania and Slovakia

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in chilled chicken breast from Poland in France

RASFF

Salmonella spp. and Campylobacter spp. in chicken elements from Poland in France

RASFF

Salmonella Infantis (in 3 out of 5 samples) in fresh fillets of broiler chickens from Poland in Lithuania

RASFF

Salmonella Enteritidis in chilled chicken breast from Poland in the Czech Republic

RASFF

Salmonella Montevideo in organic tahini from Germany, made with raw material from Turkey in  Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Republic of North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Türkiye

RASFF

Salmonella in Tartar raw beef sausage from Poland in the UK, Ireland and Netherlands

UK reveals more sick in multi-country Salmonella outbreak

Food Safety News

The number of patients in a Salmonella outbreak in the United Kingdom has increased to more than 130.

It was previously reported that 81 people were sick in the UK as part of a multi-country Salmonella Mbandaka outbreak. As of early March, there are 132 UK cases, according to the Food Standards Agency (FSA).

Whole genome sequencing confirmed a microbiological link between ready-to-cook chicken breast manufactured in Ukraine, and cases in Finland, Estonia, and the UK. The chicken was supplied to the UK from Ukraine via the Netherlands, and a company in the Netherlands has recalled products sent to the UK. All items were for food service use and have been withdrawn from the UK market.

In May 2022, the UK reported 31 Salmonella Mbandaka cases with 25 from England and three each in Scotland and Wales with sample dates between Sept. 2021 and April 2022. Four were admitted to the hospital and one person died.

As of late 2022, Finland had 89 cases while a few patients also lived in the Czech Republic, Estonia, France, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, and Israel. Cases occurred in all age groups.

Ready-to-eat (RTE) chicken products or fresh chicken meat, such as those used in sandwiches and wraps, were said to be the likely vehicles of infection, according to an assessment by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).

Finnish officials linked the suspected RTE products to an Estonian company, which received processed chicken meat from different suppliers.

ECDC said epidemiological data and microbiological evidence from whole genome sequencing of human isolates indicated there were several sources through different distribution chains.

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella – Polish Chicken Products – Sesame Seeds – Brazilian Chicken Products – Beef – Smoked Paprika – Chicken Thighs – Poultry Meat – Chicken Broiler- Paprika Mild – Black Pepper

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in chilled chicken elements from Poland in Germany

RASFF

Salmonella (detected/25g) in hulled sesame seeds from Nigeria in Poland

RASFF

Salmonella (in 2 out of 5 samples) in fresh whole chicken from Poland in Lithuania

RASFF

SALMONELLA IN SESAME SEEDS FROM TURKIYE in Greece

RASFF

Salmonella Kisarawe and Salonella Anatum in beef from Namibia in Norway

RASFF

Salmonella in smoked paprika powder from Spain in Germany

RASFF

Salmonella (presence /25g) in frozen marinated chicken breast fillets from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF

Salmonella group CO in Chicken kebab from Poland in Germany

RASFF

Salmonella Infantis (in 5 out of 5 units) in fresh chicken thighs from Lithuania in Poland and Latvia

RASFF

Salmonella enteritidis in poultry meat from Spain in Togo and France

RASFF

Salmonella in sesame seeds from Nigeria in Greece

RASFF

Salmonella in sesame seeds from Nigeria in Greece

RASFF

Salmonella Mbandanka in chilled chicken broiler from Latvia in Finland and Estonia

RASFF

Salmonella in Paprika powder mild from Turkey in Switzerland

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in black pepper (Piper Nigrum) from Brazil in Germany

France – Poultry sausage (corizo, cheese, merguez) – Salmonella

Gov france

Identification information of the recalled product

  • Product category Feed
  • Product subcategory Meats
  • Product brand name Neutral / Id’halal / Medina Halal
  • Model names or references Corizo ​​poultry sausage Poultry cheese sausages Poultry merguez sausage
  • Identification of products
    Batch Date
    9773000072 Use-by date 03/27/2023
  • Products List Product_list.pdfAttachment
  • Packaging Per 5kg, 2.6kg, 1kg, 600g Under atmosphere
  • Marketing start/end date From 03/13/2023 to 03/17/2023
  • Storage temperature Product to be stored in the refrigerator
  • Health mark FR.69.135.001.CE
  • Further information The products were sold in the traditional department / butcher’s shop
  • Geographic area of ​​sale Whole France
  • Distributors See seller list
  • List of points of sale Vendor_list.pdf

Practical information regarding the recall

  • Reason for recall Presence of salmonella on corizo ​​sausages, merguez sausages and cheese sausage
  • Risks incurred by the consumer Salmonella spp (causative agent of salmonellosis)

RASFF Alerts- Salmonella – Polish Chicken Products – Black Pepper -Chicken – Mussels – Poultry Meat Preparations – Chilled Chicken Legs with Back Bone – Frozen Pig Small Intestine – Frozen Shrimps

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in black pepper from Brazil in Germany

RASFF

Salmonella enterica ser. Bovismorbificans (in 1 out of 5 samples /25g) in chilled chicken leg quarters from Poland, via Lithuania in Latvia

RASFF

Salmonella spp. in black pepper from Brazil in Germany

RASFF

Salmonella in chicken from Latvia in Sweden

RASFF

Salmonella enteritidis in chilled chicken from Poland in the Czech Republic

RASFF

Salmonella in mussels from The Netherlands in Belgium

RASFF

Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (present /25g) in chilled chicken fillets from Poland in the Czech Republic

RASFF

Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (present /25g) in chilled chicken fillets from Poland in the Czech Republic

RASFF

Salmonella in poultry meat preparations from Belgium in Luxembourg

RASFF

Salmonella enterica ser. Bovismorbificans in chilled chicken legs with back bone from Latvia in Estonia

RASFF

Salmonella spp. and high levels of recontamination germs in frozen shrimps from Bangladesh, via the Netherlands in Germany

RASFF

Salmonella in frozen pig small intestine from Lithuania, via the Netherlands in Germany

Research – Pathogen Reduction Monitoring Program for Salmonella and Campylobacter for raw poultry

CFIA

There is a significant burden of illness in Canada from foodborne salmonellosis and campylobacteriosis. Both epidemiological evidence end expert opinion recognize poultry and poultry derived products as an important source of these illnesses.

Salmonella and Campylobacter are known to occur naturally in live poultry and contamination may occur at any stage of the farm-to fork production. Accordingly, food businesses that slaughter poultry or process poultry products need to consider Salmonella and Campylobacter as hazards of concern to their products and implement control measures throughout their production process to mitigate risks. Food businesses can verify the efficacy of their control measures, such as sanitary dressing procedures and antimicrobial interventions by implementing the PRMP.

RASFF Alert – Campylobacter – Polish Chicken

RASFF

Salmonella Newport and Campylobacter in fresh poultry meat from Poland in Italy