Category Archives: Salmonella

USA – New recall of frozen shredded coconut issued more than 2 years after FDA warning

Food Safety News

A new recall of frozen shredded coconut is connected to the Food and Drug Administration’s 2018 warning about multiple salmonella infections linked to the product.

The Evershing International Trading Company on April 15 recalled Coconut Tree brand “Frozen Shredded Coconut” in 16-ounce packages because it is potentially contaminated with Salmonella

The new recall comes with a history that goes back to a Feb. 15, 2018, public health warning, in which FDA advised consumers not to eat any recalled Coconut Tree Brand Frozen Shredded Coconut. The recalled frozen shredded coconut at that time was linked to 27 salmonellosis illnesses nine states.

Those illnesses occurred from Jan. 9, 2017, to Nov. 4, 2017. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health tested multiple coconut samples, finding positives for Salmonella.

Evershing International Trading Company first recalled the product on Jan. 3, 2018.

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella – Frozen Chicken Legs – Frozen Poultry Meat -Chilled Chicken Broler Quarters – Sesame Seeds – Boneless Chicken -Turkey Meat Preparation

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RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (present /25g) in frozen chicken leg quarters from Poland in Bulgaria

RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (presence /25g) in frozen chicken leg quarters from Poland in Bulgaria

RASFF – Salmonella (presence /25g) and Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (presence /25g) in frozen poultry meat from Poland in Poland

RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Newport (in 1 out of 5 samples /25g) in chilled chicken broiler quarters from Poland in Lithuania

RASFF – Salmonella (presence /25g) in sesame seeds from Nigeria in Poland

RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Infantis (presence /25g) in frozen boneless chicken drumsticks from Poland in Lithuania

RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (presence /25g) in turkey meat preparation from France in France

RASFF Alert – Animal Feed – Salmonella – Fish Meal

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RASFF – Salmonella (presence /25g) in fish meal from the United States in Greece

 

Research- Securely Studying Salmonella to Advance Produce Safety

Mirage News

Among the extensive facilities at NC State’s Phytotron is a secure greenhouse that is specially designed to allow scientists to study bacteria, fungi and viruses that infect plants – or contaminate produce causing foodborne illness – in a safe and secure manner.

Kellie Burris, former postdoctoral scholar now turned staff fellow microbiologist with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), who is based in the department of Food, Bioprocessing and Nutrition Science, is using NC State’s secure greenhouse to study how fresh fruits and vegetables become contaminated with foodborne pathogens before harvesting.

“NC State’s Phytotron greenhouse is unique in that it is BSL-3 certified, one of only a handful of such facilities in the U.S.,” said Burris. “The FDA wanted to better understand how outbreak-related Salmonella strains can contaminate fresh produce, but they needed access to a high-containment facility to isolate the microbes from the natural environment. And that’s how my project started.”

 

Research – What You Need to Know About Salmonella and Eggs

Food Poisoning Bulletin Salmonella Eggs Food Poisoning Food Safety

With the coronavirus pandemic forcing more people to cook at home, many consumers need reminders about food safety. If you haven’t cooked in a long time, you should know that there are some foods that are considered high risk and need to be handled with care. One of those foods is eggs, more specifically Salmonella and eggs.

Many Salmonella outbreaks have been linked to raw and under cooked eggs. Eggs should be cooked to a final temperature of 160°F, as measured with a reliable food thermometer. That means that sunny side up and over-easy eggs are not safe to eat, especially if anyone in your family is in a high risk group for food poisoning.

Research – Reducing the risk of Salmonella re-contamination in feed

Poultry World

Deploying risk mitigation strategies across the feed-to-food production chain can help assure safe animal feed and poultry production. However, certain processes, such as the desiccation (drying out) of salmonella cells, can circumvent routine cleaning and hygiene practices.

During certain phases of feed production, salmonella cells may become dormant only to re-activate later in the production process. The inability to detect dormant salmonella cells may undermine routine hygiene checks and threaten feed safety. This risk demands strategies that go beyond hydrothermal treatment. Research has shown that preservation strategies, including the application of potent buffered and synergistic blends of organic acids and surfactants, can significantly reduce ­contamination risk during animal feed processing.

Research – Salmonella Dublin Threat May Be Growing

Dairy Herd

Salmonella kswfoodworld

Image CDC

Salmonella is a common and bothersome disease organism in livestock production. But the species Salmonella Dublin is of particular concern.

Cattle are the host species for S. Dublin, which is highly contagious and difficult to treat. On dairy farms, it is most likely to cause severe clinical disease in calves. It also is classified as a zoonotic disease, meaning it can be transferred from animals to humans through consumption of raw milk and undercooked meat (and accidentally ingested faeces and saliva) from infected animals.

Michigan State University Veterinary and Extension educators Angel Abuelo and Faith Cullens recently published a new bulletin on Salmonella Dublin in dairy calves. They noted that this particular strain of Salmonella has typically been thought of as a problem primarily on dairies in the western United States, but it is gaining a foothold in the Midwest and Northeast. For example, from 2015 to 2019, S. Dublin represented 20.8% of all Salmonella species isolates in bovine samples at Michigan State’s veterinary diagnostic laboratory.

RASFF Alerts – Salmonella – Chicken Broiler Fillets – Chilled Bacon and Smokey Apple Marinade -Boneless Half Chicken Fillets -Chicken Meat – Chicken Breast – Chicken Quarters

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RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (presence /25g) in frozen chicken broiler fillets from Poland in Lithuania

RASFF – Salmonella (presence /10g) in chilled bacon in smoky apple marinade from Estonia in Estonia

RASFF – Salmonella (in 2 out of 5 samples /25g) in frozen salted skinless boneless half chicken breasts from Brazil in the UK

RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (presence /25g) in frozen chicken fresh meat from Poland in France

RASFF – Salmonella (presence /25g) in frozen salted half chicken breasts from Brazil in the Netherlands

RASFF – Salmonella enterica ser. Enteritidis (present /25g) in frozen chicken leg quarters from Poland in Bulgaria

Netherlands – Dutch Salmonella illnesses linked to Brazilian poultry

Food Safety News

Chicken meat from Brazil is being investigated as the source of Salmonella illnesses in the Netherlands.

Between the end of 2019 and mid-February 2020, the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) identified a cluster of six Salmonella Virchow infections distributed across the country using whole genome sequencing (WGS) but no epidemiological link among them was reported.

An outbreak investigation by RIVM and the Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority (NVWA) identified six food isolates as genetically closely related to cases and associated with the source of the infection.

These isolates came from poultry meat, including frozen poultry imported from Brazil.

 

Research – Petition Asks FSIS to Declare 31 Salmonella Strains as Adulterants in Meat and Poultry

Food Safety Magazine

Marler Clark LLP filed a petition on behalf of several individuals and consumer groups on January 18, 2020, asking the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA FSIS) to issue an interpretive rule declaring 31 Salmonella strains as per se adulterants in meat and poultry products. These strains include four antibiotic-resistant serovars—Salmonella enterica Hadar, Heidelberg, Newport, and Typhimurium—as well as Dublin, Enteritidis, and Infantis. In support of its request, the petition relies heavily on its interpretation of precedent established following the 1993 Escherichia coli outbreak, when USDA declared E. coli O157:H7 a per se adulterant in raw ground beef through interpretive rulemaking.

The petition argues that FSIS has the authority to declare the 31 Salmonella serovars per se adulterants through interpretive rulemaking because the proposed rule would meet the criteria set out in Texas Food Industry Ass’n v. Espy, 870 F. Supp. 143, 147-48 (W.D. Tex. 1994). More specifically, the petition argues that because the Federal Meat Inspection Act does not require USDA to engage in substantive rulemaking to determine whether a particular substance is an adulterant, the agency has “the discretion to proceed through case-by-case adjudication and interpretive orders, rather than through the rulemaking process.” Espy, 870 F. Supp. at 147. The petition also argues that the issuance of such a rule would not be arbitrary or capricious or not in accordance with law.