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Romaine Lettuce RECALL In 23 States Over E. Coli: DETAILS

Romaine Lettuce Recall E Coli

MARY CLARE JALONICK   05/ 6/10 11:08 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — An E. coli outbreak possibly linked to tainted lettuce has sickened at least 19 people in Ohio, New York and Michigan, including students on three college campuses, prompting a recall throughout much of the country.

Freshway Foods of Sidney, Ohio, said it was recalling romaine lettuce sold under the Freshway and Imperial Sysco brands in 23 states and the District of Columbia because of a possible link to E. coli.

Twelve of those sickened were hospitalized, three of them with life-threatening symptoms, the Food and Drug Administration said. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it was looking at 10 other cases probably linked to the outbreak.

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, according to local health departments in those states.

The FDA is focusing its investigation on lettuce grown in Arizona as a possible source for the outbreak, according to two people who have been briefed by the agency. Donna Rosenbaum, director of the food safety advocacy group Safe Tables Our Priority and one of those briefed, said the agency held a phone call with public health advocates Thursday.

Rosenbaum and other public health advocates have long been pushing for stronger food safety laws. The House passed a bill last year that would give the agency much more authority to police food production, but the Senate has not acted on it.

The New York state Public Health Laboratory in Albany discovered the contamination in a bag of Freshway Foods shredded romaine lettuce on Wednesday after local authorities had been investigating the 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 or its location but said an investigation was under way.

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 Erie County, N.Y., health department issued an alert late last month, however, that linked at least one diagnosis of E. coli to a student who ate at a Daemen College dining 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.

Freshway Foods said in a statement Thursday that the FDA informed the company about the positive test in New York on Wednesday afternoon. The statement said "an extensive FDA investigation" of Freshway Foods' facility in Sidney has not uncovered any contamination at the plant.

The recalled lettuce has a "best if used by" date of May 12 or earlier. 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.

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WASHINGTON — An E. coli outbreak possibly linked to tainted lettuce has sickened at least 19 people in Ohio, New York and Michigan, including students on three college campuses, prompting a reca...
WASHINGTON — An E. coli outbreak possibly linked to tainted lettuce has sickened at least 19 people in Ohio, New York and Michigan, including students on three college campuses, prompting a reca...
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:28 AM on 05/10/2010
I've got three heads of lettuce growing nicely in a planter right outside my kitchen door. It will last for another month or two.

Best way to avoid e.coli is to grow your own.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2014
06:38 PM on 05/09/2010
Whew, for a minute there I thought I would have to give up the Romain. So far the recall hasn't hit my state!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SouthJerseySteve
I am NOT in a Skim Milk Marriage!
05:47 PM on 05/09/2010
Dang! I'm trying to eat healthy, get more salads in my diet, and there we go again with tainted lettuce, spinach, mushrooms, whatever. I might as well enjoy my french fries and mac and cheese. Nobody got sick from eating junk food.....

[end sarcasm]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pinkeyelemonade
Had Enough? Vote Green Party.
01:31 PM on 05/09/2010
Crap...pretty sure I've got some of that Kroger lettuce in the fridge...
12:24 AM on 05/09/2010
Have you all noticed that the HuffPost does not have a section on Health or Medicine? I wonder why HuffPost is reluctant to address the issues of safety (FDA< EPA, etc etc etc........) I think HP is cared to open a pandoras box.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:28 AM on 05/10/2010
Try the sections called Living.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PolicyWonkette
09:07 PM on 05/08/2010
What would have been nice is a list of the 23 states where the recall is in effect.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pinkeyelemonade
Had Enough? Vote Green Party.
01:33 PM on 05/09/2010
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.

Last paragraph.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PolicyWonkette
11:15 PM on 05/09/2010
Thanks, I read it in another article -- paragraph 2.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:00 PM on 05/08/2010
Tainted lettuce doesn't kill people, people kill people.
Keep your big guvmint off my freedoms.
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Halsey
"There is a price to pay for speaking the truth. T
01:41 AM on 05/08/2010
when tainted lettuce is outlawed....only outlaws will have tainted lettuce.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ancatdubh
06:49 PM on 05/07/2010
Arizona lettuce... they'll probably end up blaming it on illegal immigrants.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2014
06:44 PM on 05/09/2010
Well they have to p.e.e. somewhere!
06:35 PM on 05/07/2010
The agency would not disclose the name of that facility or its location but said an investigation was under way.

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.

SO WHY are they protecting the people who caused this? Shoppers should be able to look at where something comes from and make theirown decision.
07:05 PM on 05/12/2010
The lettuce came from Oklahoma.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
crystalsmuse
Mico-bios are for chumps! Wait... Damn!
06:15 PM on 05/07/2010
I wonder if these e-coli outbreaks have anything to do with the tainted water they spray on crops, or the genetically modified foods which contain e-coli DNA spliced into them. Crops which have been shown to mutate.
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photo
12:17 AM on 05/08/2010
Nope. It has to do with animal fecĕs that wasn't washed off. And in the case of a last outbreak, the product is mixed together and packaged so the bacteria-which is likely a highly virulent natural mutation-has plenty of time to grow.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:30 AM on 05/10/2010
If there are factory farms in the area, the runoff from their feces may have gotten into the water irrigating the crops.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:03 PM on 05/08/2010
My neighbor just gave me a bag of green beans and I saw on the package they were from China ! They went right in the garbage. I don't want cheap produce.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:31 AM on 05/10/2010
I won't eat anything from China.

There was some fish in the meat dept. at Vons marked China. No way I'm eating that.

Not eating farmed or Atlantic either.

If it doesn't way U.S. or wild caught, I'm not eating it.
03:12 PM on 05/07/2010
Don't bother to comment. Anything intelligent or deemed controversial will be rejected.
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Skygazer
USA needs fiber optic Internet for one and all, vi
04:17 PM on 05/07/2010
Alright already, we get the message, take a frickin' Xanax or something you're getting tiresome.
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Skygazer
USA needs fiber optic Internet for one and all, vi
02:53 PM on 05/07/2010
Another good reason to boycott Arizona lettuce....
02:51 PM on 05/07/2010
Oy, when are they going to stop spraying crops with cow and pig poop tainted water?
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:32 AM on 05/10/2010
When there are no more factory farms.
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Cookie100
Old enough to know better
02:37 PM on 05/07/2010
Why of all categories is the Food section moderated, that seems strange.
02:44 PM on 05/07/2010
It's because it's Friday and all the adults have gone on a three day week-end and left the children un-attended.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
03:54 AM on 05/09/2010
"Moderation in all things."

Or my little saying: Moderation is good, within limits.