17-State Salmonella Outbreak Linked To Raw Tomatoes

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CARLA K. JOHNSON | June 10, 2008 09:01 AM EST | AP

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A sign on the door at McDonald's restaurant in downtown Chicago tells customers the fast food restaurant has stopped serving sliced tomatoes Monday, June 9, 2008. McDonald's says it has pulled tomatoes in its restaurants across the nation over concerns about Salmonella food poisoning linked to uncooked tomatoes. (AP Photo/Russel A. Daniels)

CHICAGO — Federal officials hunted for the source of a 17-state salmonella outbreak linked to three types of raw tomatoes, while the list of supermarkets and restaurants yanking those varieties from shelves and menus grew.

McDonald's, Wal-Mart, Burger King, Kroger, Outback Steakhouse, Winn-Dixie and Taco Bell were among the companies that voluntarily withdrew red plum, red Roma or round red tomatoes unless they were grown in certain states and countries.

In addition, officials at the Los Angeles Unified School District _ the nation's second largest _ said Monday they have "indefinitely suspended" serving uncooked tomatoes.

The FDA is investigating the source of the outbreak, agency spokeswoman Kimberly Rawlings said. "We are working hard and fast on this one and hope to have something as quickly as possible," Rawlings said Monday.

Cherry tomatoes, grape tomatoes, tomatoes sold with the vine still attached and homegrown tomatoes are likely not the source of the outbreak, federal officials said.

Also not associated with the outbreak are raw red Roma, red plum and round red tomatoes from Arkansas, California, Georgia, Hawaii, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Belgium, Canada, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Israel, Netherlands and Puerto Rico.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that since mid-April, 167 people infected with salmonella with the same "genetic fingerprint" have been identified. At least 23 people have been hospitalized.

A 67-year-old cancer patient in Texas who health officials said was sickened by salmonella at a Mexican restaurant is believed to be the first death associated with the outbreak.

The death of Raul Rivera last week has been officially attributed to his cancer, but Houston health department spokeswoman Kathy Barton told the Houston Chronicle in Tuesday's editions that the salmonella strain was a contributing factor.

Rivera's wife said he was hospitalized after eating pico de gallo, a tomato-based condiment, in late May while celebrating good news about his cancer treatment.

Salmonella is a bacteria that lives in the intestinal tracts of humans and other animals. The bacteria are usually transmitted to humans by eating foods contaminated with animal feces.

Most infected people suffer fever, diarrhea and abdominal cramps starting 12 to 72 hours after infection. The illness tends to last four to seven days.

The Food and Drug Administration warned consumers in New Mexico and Texas as early as June 3 about the outbreak. The agency expanded its warning during the weekend and chains began voluntarily removing many red plum, red Roma or round red tomatoes from their shelves in response.

The salmonella causing the outbreak is a very unusual type called salmonella saintpaul, said FDA Commissioner Andrew C. von Eschenbach, who added it was not more virulent than other types of salmonella.

McDonald's, the world's largest hamburger chain, stopped serving sliced tomatoes on its sandwiches as a precaution, but will continue serving grape tomatoes in its salads because no problems have been linked to that variety.

The decision didn't upset Connie Semaitis, a 49-year-old travel agent in downtown Chicago, who bought a cheeseburger and a drink at a McDonald's during lunch hour Monday.

"I'd rather be safe than sorry," Semaitis said.

Tampa-based OSI Restaurant Partners LLC, which owns and operates eight brands including Outback Steakhouse, Carrabba's and Bonefish Grill, said it stopped serving all raw tomatoes other than grape tomatoes on Saturday evening. The company also instructed restaurants to discard salsa and other prepared foods containing raw tomatoes.

Burger King Corp. said it had withdrawn raw round red tomatoes from most of its U.S. restaurants, as well as locations in Canada and Puerto Rico and some other Caribbean islands. Some California restaurants continued using the tomatoes because they buy from growers in states the FDA has said are not involved in the outbreak, Burger King said.

Other restaurant operators that stopped serving most tomatoes: Yum Brands Inc., which owns Taco Bell, KFC, Long John Silver's and A&W All-American Food Restaurants; Darden Restaurants, which owns and operates six brands including Red Lobster and Olive Garden; Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc.; and Garden Fresh Restaurant Corp., which operates Souplantation and Sweet Tomatoes restaurants in 15 states.

Among retailers, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. _ the largest grocery seller in the U.S. _ is working with federal officials to ensure affected tomatoes are pulled from Wal-Marts, Neighborhood Markets and Sam's Club warehouse stores nationwide, spokeswoman Deisha Galberth said.

Galberth said the company is modifying orders to its stores and putting an electronic block at its registers as an added safety measure to keep the recalled tomatoes from being purchased.

Cincinnati-based Kroger Co., the nation's largest traditional grocery chain, said it pulled the three types of tomatoes from all its stores in 31 states on Sunday per the FDA advisory. The company had early last week pulled the tomatoes from stores in Texas and New Mexico.

Winn-Dixie Stores Inc., which operates 521 stores in five southern states, also stopped selling tomatoes involved in the FDA warning, as did Publix Super Markets Inc. Publix offered refunds to customers who bought the tomatoes before they were removed from shelves.

Trader Joe's, with more than 280 grocery stores in 23 states, also stopped selling the tomatoes in question and offered refunds, according to a statement from spokeswoman Alison Mochizuki.

Giant Eagle, which has 223 supermarkets in western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and Maryland, said it also removed the tomatoes from store shelves; as did SuperValu Inc., which operates Jewel, Shaw's, Cub Foods, Acme and some Albertson's stores.

___

AP Business Writer Matthew Perrone in Washington and AP writers Lisa Orkin in Miami; John Antczak in Los Angeles; Ramesh Santanam in Pittsburgh; Gillian Flaccus in Irvine, Calif.; and Maria Danilova in Chicago contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

FDA warning: http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/NEWS/2008/NEW01848.html

CDC: http://www.cdc.gov/salmonella/saintpaul/

 
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who is bush's "heckuva guy" in charge of protecting american lives and business through diligent regulation and testing of america's food supply? --- this is costing florida $700million while the tomato crop rots --- not since katrina and "heckuva job brownie" have we seen such a stunning demonstration of bush's cronyism incompetence...
sorry, forgot to mention that the death toll due to salmonella poisoning is at 17 (and climbing steadily) ...

North America tomato industry Reeling - reuters
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN6A33595920080610

Florida Tomato Industry in "Complete Collapse" - rawstory.com
http://www.rawstory.com/news/mochila/Florida_tomato_industry_in_complete_06102008.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 06/11/2008

I had some tomatoes for lunch today mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm they were good mmmMMMMmmmm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 PM on 06/10/2008

Supply Side Economics After 28 years:

1. De-regulate...everything.
2. Privatize...as much as possible.
3. Hire industry hacks in government regulatory shell agencies.
4. Give out welfare checks to corporations.
5. Cut taxes to top earners.

When the inevitable disaster(s) strikes, because by design nobody's minding the store, be ready with a plan to profit from the disarray and fear.

Sure glad I have seven varieties of tomatoes growing in my garden (take control of the demand side). Also potatoes, lettuce, cukes, peppers, beans, watermelon, corn, bananas. Wish all of you did, too.

Get started now, it only takes a couple of months for many of these crops to come in, takes a small space, it's healthy. Read www.michaelpollan.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 06/10/2008
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As long as you still reside on the ground to grow them in; I mean if all hell breaks loose as you claim...

Isn't it a bit more costly to grow one's own in the first place? All those tools...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 06/10/2008

40' X 40' (12 m X 12 m) garden costs:

(Note, this is a big garden by home standards).

3' high fencing (optional -- because I knew I have rabbits out there, and to keep my dogs out) $75, 16 wooden stakes, $16, various seeds $25, seedlings $24, 10-10-10 fertilizer (first year only if you have, like me, sandy unfertile soil, $25 for 120 pounds, after that make and use compost as fertilizer; scarecrow made from scrap wood and old clothing: $0. Rake $8, hoe $8, sunscreen $6, straw hat $10. Let's see: $197.

Yield so far: 250 pounds of potatoes (most still unharvested), 75 pounds of tomatoes (and counting), 15 heads of lettuce, scores of banana peppers, jalapeno peppers, 20 pounds of cucumbers, 12 pounds of pinto beans, 2 watermelons (so far), 110 ears of corn, 5 pounds of blueberries (planted by previous owner). Estimated value at stupermarket prices: I don't know, um, $400.

100% return on investment since planting began in mid-Feb. How did the stock market do in the past three months? And the garden's still producing gang-busters.

Next year's cost will be even lower since most materials will be re-used.

Try it, you'll like it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 PM on 06/10/2008

Professor Nuttcup said not to worry about the tomatoes. I believe him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 06/10/2008
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I can't believe I waited all winter to eat those good summer tomatoes, and now they're poisoned with salmonella!

Everybody says "grow your own" but the heat of the desert Southwest makes that very difficult. Extreme hot weather causes blossom drop. I tried and failed. Now I'm at the mercy of mass produced tomatoes.

Not sure I can even trust farmers market tomatoes. Who knows where they were grown?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 06/10/2008

Head aches. They never seem to mention head aches when describing Salmonella poisoning symptoms.

I had salmonella poisoning. I was probably VERY close to death. And the first and most obvious symptom was the worst head ache ever. The only thing I could think of that would cause such pain was an brain aneurysm.

The head ache lasted at least 8 hours before the intestinal problems developed.

I completely lost 2 days from my life. Had no consciousness of those days happening. The demerol helped. But not that much.

And how does the salmonella get inside the tomatos? That seems to be the most interesting detail. And has been left out of every report I have seen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 PM on 06/10/2008

In some other cases I've seen if was from the irrigated water used. Water went through the cow pasture, then into the fields, then into the plant.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 06/10/2008

What the hell are the people in charge doing? Buy local and grow your own.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 06/10/2008

There is a calculated attack on our food supplies. The powers that be want a food shortage and even famine that will hit after a failed harvest this year. Why failed? becuase our government is pouring tons and tons of barium and aluminum salts in the atmosphere along with several other governments in an effort to manipulate weather . Why? Well if theres enough non sunny weather, as we are having in the NW and floods in the green belt there will be shortage. The corps already control the market and are not growing enough food to supply the world on purpose. Why? When economic collapse(also planned and orchestrated) comes and theres no food. They will say bring us your guns and come to the fema camps and we'll feed you. There will be a solution of a NAU, new currency , they wipe out your bill of rights , the sheeple will gladly give it up for food as most are not prepared and non believers will not be prepared. This is a sham to also bring about mandatory irradiation of foods so only big ag can afford to provide foods that have had all its value destroyed by radiation, its about control. Theres an assult on your Republic going on. Wake the $%^& UP!! Smart folks will take notice and all non large corporate food suppliers whether Beef, Pork, vegtables, etc will be getting attacked, you will see more contrived problems here with food supplys. Wake Up!!! FFS

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 PM on 06/10/2008

Its gonna be like Mad Max, I can't wait. Those movies are sweet

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 06/10/2008

I think its more of a result of the exploding population coupled with the cheaper-the-better factory farm systems. We will see more outbreaks like this because we make more and more food each year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 06/10/2008
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When should I stop laughing?

First of all, Snopes debunked this "NAU" idea of yours.

Second, other countries formed a union (think the EU) -- has it hurt them?

Third, if there is change, how do you know it'll be sooooooooooooo bad?

Fourth, it's spelled "supplies".

Fifth, I've heard of weather control conspiracy theories, but yours takes the cake. I hope tinfoil was inexpensive, because a lot was needed to make THAT hat.

Sixth, how can one be prepared? Home grown food requires land. Only home owners free and clear would be "safe" and even then, they still pay annual fees for living on the LAND. Living in an apartment requires a lot of buckets. If this big collapse comes, hoarding tinned food seems rather pointless.

Seventh, if you lot claim to know all this is happening, why aren't you doing anything about it? Seems odd, that... it rather wrecks your credibility too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 06/10/2008

SEE?? THAT'S why we need a border fence. Those tomatoes sneak across the border at night and dang it if they didn't infect us all!! Oh and BTW, I'm sure that all the companies that are not using tomatoes now have dropped those items by 5 cents, right? Noooo, someone will have extra vacation time with the money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 06/10/2008
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Tomatoes? The round orbs that are pictured on the front page look like the hockey pucks they strip mine in south Texas. Grow your own!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 06/10/2008
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