Category Archives: Salmonella in Chicken

Poland – Salmonella in chicken breast fillets. Biedronka withdraws the product from the shops.

REMONEWS

The Chief Health Services Inspectorate announced the recall of a batch of fresh chicken breast fillets due to the detection of salmonella bacteria. These are Drobex fillets sold in the Biedronka discount chain.

The Chief Health Inspectorate reported that, following the official veterinary inspection, Salmonella Enteritidis was detected in a batch of the fresh chicken breast fillet product. It’s about the product: Fresh MAP chicken breast fillet, batch number: 793921 and expiry date: 12/01/2021.

The manufacturer of the product is Przedsiębiorstwo Drobiarskie Drobex in Solec Kujawski with the veterinary identification number: WNI 04033902. It was produced for Jeronimo Martins Polska, the owner of the Biedronka chain.

According to the GIS, an administrative decision was issued on 23 November 2021

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella -Polish Chicken Products – Black Pepper – Fresh Duck with Offal – Dried Dill – Mussels – Chicken Wings – Hummus – Organic Ashwagandha – Chicken Thighs – Chicken Breast – Bovine Carcases

RASFF

Salmonella Enteritidis in frozen chicken legs from Poland in Romania

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Salmonella enteritidis in frozen hen filet breast, oirgin Poland in Romania

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Salmonella EO in dried Dill from Egypt in Latvia and Poland

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Salmonella Enteritidis pulpe superioare pui din Polonia/// Salmonella Enteritidis in chicken legs from Poland in Romania and the Netherlands

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Salmonella enterica ser. Newport in chilled chicken legs from Poland in Romania

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S. typhimurium in young, fresh duck with offal from Hungary in Slovenia

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Riscontro di Salmonella spp. ed alta conta di E. coli in mitili //Salmonella spp and too high count of E. coli in mussels from Spain in Italy

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Salmonella Enteritidis in chilled chicken meat from Poland in Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary and Lithuania

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Salmonella in trio hummus from the Netherlands in Belgium

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Salmonella spp in chicken wings from Slovenia in Croatia

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Salmonella Typhimurium in chilled chicken breasts and thighs from France in Germany

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Salmonella Morehead and Salmonella Rubislaw in black pepper from Brazil in Germany

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Salmonella Enteritidis and Salmonella group C2-C3 in official samples of chicken neck skins from Poland in Poland and Germany

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Salmonella spp. in food supplement Organic ashwagandha in capsules from Slovenia in Italy, Hungary and Germany

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Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis in Bovine carcases from Germany in Norway

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Salmonella Newport in poultry carcasses, elements of poultry meat, poultry offal from Poland in Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Latvia and Romania

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Salmonella Morehead in black pepper from Brazil in Germany

USA – Backyard Chickens hospitalize 273 and kill 2 with Salmonella – 1,135 sick in 2021 including 268 under the age of 5

Food Poison Journal

Salmonella Campylobacter

CDC: This year’s investigation of outbreaks linked to backyard poultry is over. However, any backyard poultry can carry Salmonella germs that can make you sick. Always take steps to stay healthy around your flock.

CDC and public health officials in several states investigated multistate outbreaks of Salmonella infections with serotypes of Enteritidis, Hadar, Indiana, Infantis, Mbandaka, and Muenchen.

Epidemiologic and laboratory data showed that contact with backyard poultry made people sick.

A total of 1,135 people infected with one of the outbreak strains were reported from 48 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. The true number of sick people in these outbreaks was likely much higher than the number reported, and these outbreaks may not have been limited to the states with known illnesses. This is because many people recover without medical care and are not tested for Salmonella.

Research – Peanut Skins as a Natural Antimicrobial Feed Additive to Reduce the Transmission of Salmonella in Poultry Meat Produced for Human Consumption

Journal of Food Protection

Salmonella is the leading cause of bacterial foodborne zoonoses in humans. Thus, the development of strategies to control bacterial pathogens in poultry is essential. Peanut skins, a considerable waste by-product of the peanut industry is discarded and of little economic value. However, peanut skins contain polyphenolic compounds identified that have antimicrobial properties. Hence, we aim to investigate the use of peanut skins as an antibacterial feed additive in the diets of broilers to prevent the proliferation of Salmonella Enteritidis (SE). One hundred sixty male hatchlings (Ross 308) were randomly assigned to, (1) PS: peanut skin diet without SE inoculation (2) PSSE: peanut skin diet and SE inoculation 3) CON: control diet without SE inoculation (4) CONSE: control diet with SE inoculation. Feed intake and body weights were determined at week 0 and 5. On days 10 and 24 post hatch, 3 birds/pen (24 total) from each treatment group were euthanized and the liver, spleen, small intestine, and ceca were collected. The weights of the liver, spleen and ceca were recorded. Organ invasion was determined by counting SE colonies. Each pen served as an experimental unit and was analyzed using a t-test. Performance data was analyzed in a completely randomized design using a general linear mixed model to evaluate differences. There were no significant differences ( P > 0.05) in weekly average pen body weight, total feed consumption, bird weight gain and feed conversion ratio between the treatment groups. There were no significant differences in SE CFU/g for fecal, litter or feed between treatment groups CONSE and PSSE. However, for both fecal and litter, the PSSE treatment group tended (P ≤0.1) to have a lower Salmonella CFU/g compared to the CONSE treatment group. The results indicate that peanut skins may have potential application as an antimicrobial feed additive to reduce the transmission or proliferation of SE in poultry environments or flocks.

USA – CDC – This year’s investigation of Salmonella outbreaks linked to backyard poultry is over

CDC

Salmonella Campylobacter

November 18, 2021

CDC and public health officials in several states investigated multistate outbreaks of Salmonella infections with serotypes of Enteritidis, Hadar, Indiana, Infantis, Mbandaka, and Muenchen.

Epidemiologic and laboratory data showed that contact with backyard poultry made people sick.

Epidemiologic Data

A total of 1,135 people infected with one of the outbreak strains were reported from 48 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico (see map). The true number of sick people in these outbreaks was likely much higher than the number reported, and these outbreaks may not have been limited to the states with known illnesses. This is because many people recover without medical care and are not tested for Salmonella.

Illnesses started on dates ranging from December 15, 2020, to October 10, 2021 (see timeline). Age information was available for 1,132 people. Their ages ranged from less than 1 to 97 years, with a median age of 37 years. Many were young children: 268 (24%) were under 5 years and 140 (12%) were under 1 year. Of 1,107 people with sex information available, 646 (58%) were female. Of 829 people with information available, 273 (33%) were hospitalized. Two deaths were reported, one from Indiana and one from Virginia.

State and local public health officials interviewed people about the animals they came into contact with the week before they got sick. Of the 677 people interviewed, 449 (66%) reported contact with backyard poultry before getting sick.

Traceback Data

Of 293 people who reported contact with backyard poultry and provided more information, 212 (72%) reported that they bought backyard poultry this year. Purchase locations included feedstores, auctions, and directly from hatcheries. Traceback of these purchases did not identify a single, common source of backyard poultry. A total of 264 separate purchases from more than 150 purchase locations of 70 different companies were reported. At least 17 hatcheries supplied backyard poultry to these purchase locations.

Laboratory Data

Public health investigators used the PulseNet system to identify illnesses that were part of this outbreak. CDC PulseNet manages a national database of DNA fingerprints of bacteria that cause gastrointestinal illnesses. DNA fingerprinting is performed on bacteria using a method called whole genome sequencing (WGS). WGS showed that bacteria from sick people’s samples were closely related genetically. This means that people in these outbreaks likely got sick from the same type of animal.

Public health officials from several states found two of the outbreak strains (Hadar and Enteritidis) from sick people’s backyard poultry and the backyard poultry environment.

  • On April 15, public health officials in Ohio found the outbreak strain of Salmonella Hadar from a sick person’s ducklings.
  • On May 7, local public health officials in California found the outbreak strain of Salmonella Hadar from a sick person’s duck environment (the ground, duck poop, and duck’s sleeping area).
  • On June 1, public health officials in Arizona found the outbreak strain of Salmonella Hadar from a sick person’s chickens and the chicken environment (chickens’ roost and water source).
  • On June 15, public health officials in Maryland found the outbreak strain of Salmonella Enteritidis from a sick person’s chickens.

WGS was also used to identify any predicted antibiotic resistance for bacteria from 1,101 sick people’s samples, 4 animal samples, and 7 environmental samples. Of the 1,112 samples, 394 (35%) were predicted to be resistant to one or more of the following antibiotics: amoxicillin-clavulanic acid (0.5%), ampicillin (0.9%), chloramphenicol (0.3%), cefoxitin (0.5%), ceftriaxone (0.5%), ciprofloxacin (0.1%), gentamicin (1.8%), kanamycin (0.4%), streptomycin (33.8%), sulfamethoxazole (2.2%), tetracycline (32.6%), and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (0.2%). Testing of 11 sick people’s samples using standard antibiotic susceptibility testing methods by CDC’s National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) confirmed these results (streptomycin and kanamycin were not tested by this method).

Most people with Salmonella illness recover without antibiotics. However, if antibiotics were needed, some illnesses in these outbreaks may have been difficult to treat with some commonly recommended antibiotics and may have required a different antibiotic choice.

Public Health Action

CDC always advises everyone to take steps to stay healthy around backyard poultry. CDC routinely works with hatcheries and stores that sell poultry to educate new poultry owners and control the spread of Salmonella at hatcheries.

Czech Republic – Chilled Chicken Quarters – Salmonella

Potravinynapranyri

Place of inspection:
Krmelín ( Staroveská 406, 73924 Krmelín )
IN: 73281042
Food group: Meat and meat products Non-prepacked: meat, minced meat, meat preparations

Chilled chicken quarters
Category: Unsafe food
Unsatisfactory parameter:

Salmonella Enterica ser. Enterica

The pathogenic bacterium Salmonella Enterica serum was found in raw meat Enterica . This bacterium can cause a condition called salmonellosis.

[machine translate]

Usability date: 10.10.2021
Producer: ZPD “MARICA”; General partnership JMEK Wróbel 43-300, Bielsko-Biala, 20 Straconki Street, PL 24034301
Country of origin:  Poland
Date of taking the sample: 10/6/2021
Reference number: 21-000075-SVS-CZ
Sample was detected by official control of State Veterinary Administration.

Czech Republic – Boneless chicken leg with skin – Salmonella

Potravinynapranyri

Place of inspection:
Prisovice ( Prisovice cp 157, 46346 Prisovice )
Company ID: 03444333
Food group: Meat and meat products Unpacked: meat, minced meat, meat preparations

Boneless chicken leg with skin
Category: Dangerous food
Unsatisfactory parameter:

Salmonella enterica serum. Infantis

The presence of the pathogenic bacterium Salmonella enterica serum was detected in raw chicken meat Infantis . This bacterium can cause a condition called salmonellosis.

Expiration date: 10/24/2021
Producer: Drobiu Leszek and Jerzy Smolarek SJWielichwo – Wies
Distributor: KUBEX Bartlomiej Kubiak Michal Kubiak, Spólka Komandytowa, 58-500 Jelenia Góra
Country of origin:  Poland
Sampling date: 19. 10. 2021
Reference number: 21-000074-SVS-CZ
The sample was found by an official inspection of the State Veterinary Administration.

Research – Antimicrobial Potential of Plastic Films Incorporated with Sage Extract on Chicken Meat

MDPI

The function of packaging is crucial in the maintenance of fresh meat product quality. This study aimed to assess the efficiency of six films added with coatings 2379L/220 and 2379L/221 (containing sage extracts) to inhibit Salmonella typhimurium, Staphylococcus aureus, and Escherichia coli, which showed that two of the six films had a significant effect. Additionally, the effects of the films on refrigerated skinless chicken breast meat were evaluated based on microbiological content, colour, weight loss, texture and pH. Four of the six films were examined could extend the storability of refrigerated chicken breast fillets for up to seven days. All six treated films improved the pH, colour stability, weight loss, and texture of the chicken fillets. Therefore, these findings suggested that the coatings containing sage extracts having different viscosities (2379L/220 and 2379L/221) were effective as antimicrobial adhesives in food packaging films and can be commercially applied in prolonging the storage of chicken breast meat without affecting their quality. View Full-Text

Research – Brazil turns to WTO on EU Salmonella poultry dispute; WTO reviews other issues

Food Safety News

kswfoodworld Salmonella

Brazil has again gone to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in a dispute with the European Union about controls of Salmonella in poultry meat.

The South American country has requested dispute consultations with the EU about measures on the import of salted poultry meat and turkey meat with pepper.

Brazil claims the EU’s approach to Salmonella food safety criteria on fresh poultry meat and some poultry meat preparations intended to be eaten cooked are inconsistent with WTO’s agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which creates “unjustified barriers” to trade.

The request for consultations is the first formal dispute step in the WTO process. It gives those involved an opportunity to discuss the matter and find a solution without litigation. After 60 days, if consultations have failed to resolve the dispute, Brazil may request a verdict by a panel.

Brazil has already raised a specific trade concern (STC) about the EU’s Salmonella food safety rules for fresh and poultry meat preparations on four occasions since 2017.

In the EU, fresh poultry meat cannot be placed on the market if Salmonella Enteritidis or Salmonella Typhimurium are detected. Rules on poultry meat preparations require the absence of all serotypes of Salmonella in a 25 gram sample.

Research – The Prevalence and Epidemiology of Salmonella in Retail Raw Poultry Meat in China: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

MDPI

Foodborne disease caused by Salmonella is an important public health concern worldwide. Animal-based food, especially poultry meat, is the main source of human salmonellosis. The objective of this study was to evaluate the prevalence and epidemiology of Salmonella contamination in raw poultry meat commercialized in China. Following the principle of systematic review, 98 sets of prevalence data were extracted from 74 publications conducted in 21 Chinese provincial regions. The random-effect model was constructed for subgrouping analysis by meat category, preservation type, and geographical location. The prevalence levels differed from high to low among raw poultry meat, including chicken, 26.4% (95% CI: 22.4–30.8%); pigeon, 22.6% (95% CI: 18.2–27.8%); duck, 10.1% (95% CI: 5.3–18.2%); and other poultry meat, 15.4% (95% CI: 12.0–19.5%). Prevalence data on the preservation type revealed that chilled poultry meat might be more likely to experience cross-contamination than non-chilled poultry meat in China. The distribution map of Salmonella for raw poultry meat showed that a higher prevalence level was found in the Shaanxi, Henan, Sichuan, and Beijing regions. All subgroups possessed high amounts of heterogeneity (I2 > 75%). The scientific data regarding the differences in prevalence levels between meat category, preservation method, and geographical region sources might be useful to improve specific interventions to effectively control the incidence of Salmonella in poultry meat. View Full-Text