May 10, 2010 9:15 PM

FDA Investigating E. Coli at Ariz. Lettuce Farm

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Federal investigators are looking at a farm in Yuma, Ariz., as a possible source of a widespread E. coli outbreak in romaine lettuce, according to the distributor.

Freshway Foods of Sidney, Ohio, said Thursday it recalled lettuce sold in 23 states and the District of Columbia because of a possible link to an E. coli outbreak that has sickened at least 19 people — three with life-threatening illness.

College students at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Ohio State in Columbus and Daemen College in Amherst, N.Y., are among those affected by the outbreak, according to health departments in those states.

Vice president Devon Beer said Freshway Foods worked with the Food and Drug Administration to trace the contaminated lettuce to a Yuma grower, whom he did not identify.

The recall only applies to romaine lettuce with "best if used by" date before or on May 12, when Freshway Foods stopped buying its romaine from Yuma, Beer said. The recall also affects "grab and go" salads sold at Kroger, Giant Eagle, Ingles Markets and Marsh grocery stores.

The lettuce was sold in Alabama, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

FDA spokesman Ira Allen would not confirm that the source was in Arizona, but said the investigation has focused on a farm.

"Experience tells us that the point of contamination is likely at the farm level, which can then be spread during the entire processing chain," Allen said.

Freshway Foods said it was recalling romaine lettuce sold under the Freshway and Imperial Sysco brands. No contamination was found at the company's processing plant, according to the FDA.

The New York state Public Health Laboratory discovered the contamination in a bag of Freshway Foods shredded romaine lettuce on Wednesday. Local authorities had been investigating an outbreak for several weeks. The bag of lettuce came from a processing facility that was also linked to the illnesses, the FDA said. The agency would not disclose the name of that facility.

The most common strain of E. coli found in U.S. patients is E. coli O157. The CDC said the strain linked to the lettuce, E. coli 0145, is more difficult to identify and may go unreported.

E. coli infection can cause mild diarrhea or more severe complications, including kidney damage. The three patients with life-threatening symptoms were diagnosed with hemolytic uremic syndrome, which can cause bleeding in the brain or kidneys.

It was not immediately clear why students on college campuses were sickened. Freshway Foods said the lettuce was sold to wholesalers, food service outlets, in-store salad bars and delis.

Susan Cerniglia, spokeswoman for the public health department in Washtenaw County, where the University of Michigan is located, said it doesn't appear that students who were sickened ate the contaminated food on campus. It is believed they may have been sickened at local restaurants, she said.

The health department in Erie County, N.Y., issued an alert late last month that linked at least one diagnosis of E. coli to a student who ate at a Daemen College dining facility. The alert said 12 students had become ill after eating at the school and three students were hospitalized.

Department official Kevin Montgomery said one case of E. coli was confirmed at the college and a second was suspected. All the students have recovered, he said.

Jose Rodriguez of Columbus Public Health said that not all of those sickened in Ohio ate on Ohio State's campus.

Rodriguez said 15 people took ill in the Columbus area, and there were seven confirmed cases of E. coli. Seven people were hospitalized, including five students at Ohio State. He said most people have recovered but two haven't been able to return to work.

AP
Add a Comment
by longtree-2009 May 9, 2010 7:02 AM EDT
wonder if it could have come from the water used to irrigate the crop? would think it would take an enormous amount of human fecal matter to get on that much of a crop. aren't farmers required to have portable toilets for farm workers, seem to recall that they do. farm workers are always supervised during operations, of any kind involving large number of workers, by a team leader, foreman. wonder too if mechanical lettuce pickers are used, like for other crops? wonder too if farmers are ever held responsible for causing or contributing to e-coli outbreaks? it's their farm, their operation just like a ceo is responsible of oil spills, fraud, etc. not certain the blame should all be put on the field hand.
Reply to this comment
by wyodutch May 7, 2010 5:49 PM EDT
E-coli on lettuce comes from one thing only... fecal material.
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You think the lettuce-picker from Mexico (who never saw an indoor toilet until he jumped the border)... is gonna run to the outhose when nature calls? Of course not...they squat in the lettuce patch and the Gringo dines on the tainted lettuce.
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There you are... good, hardworking people from Mexico... just doing "jobs" that Americans won't do.
Reply to this comment
by maiingan May 7, 2010 5:24 PM EDT
I can't help but wonder if the contamination was related to a cheapskate farmer cutting corners wherever possible. One way cheapskate farmers cut corners is by hiring illegal aliens, exploiting them, not enforcing cleanliness rules - and yes, "bobbyduck1", making people "stoop over all day every day" is inhumane and not necessary in a properly organized farming operation.
Reply to this comment
by bajajohn1 May 7, 2010 3:31 PM EDT
Don't worry, be happy. Soon there will be no more E-Coli lettuce contamination because there will no one left to pick the lettuce.
Reply to this comment
by book_of_wally May 7, 2010 3:59 PM EDT
Republicans think their republican farmer friends will hire US citizens to pick the lettuce. Ha ha ha! That will be the day.
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