Showing posts with label e.coli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e.coli. Show all posts

Saturday 11 June 2011

German tests link bean sprouts to deadly E. coli

German tests link bean sprouts to deadly E. coli

Bean sprouts and salad sprouts (file picture) It is believed the bean sprouts were produced in Germany

New data released in Germany strongly suggests that locally produced bean sprouts were, as suspected, the source of the deadly E. coli outbreak.

"It's the bean sprouts," said Reinhard Burger, head of Germany's centre for disease control.

Officials initially blamed the E. coli, which has killed 29 people, on imported cucumbers, then bean sprouts.

In another development, Russia agreed to lift its ban on imports of EU fresh vegetables in return for guarantees.

The Russian ban had compounded a crisis for EU vegetable-growers, with Spanish cucumber producers wrongly blamed for the contamination.

Mr Burger, who heads the Robert Koch Institute, told reporters on Friday that even though no tests of the sprouts from a farm in Lower Saxony had come back positive, the epidemiological investigation of the pattern of the outbreak had produced enough evidence to draw the conclusion.

The institute, he added, was lifting its warning against eating cucumbers, tomatoes and lettuce, but keeping it in place for the sprouts.

Some 3,000 people have been taken ill with the German outbreak of E. coli, which involves a previously unknown strain of the bacterium.

Sufferers may develop haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) where bacteria attack the kidneys and nervous system, giving them fits and often forcing them on to dialysis.

'Hot lead'
A Robert Koch Institute team in protective gear inspect the organic farm in Bienenbuettel, 6 June Robert Koch Institute researchers have been examining the farm in Bienenbuettel

"People who ate sprouts were nine times more likely to have bloody diarrhoea than those who did not," Mr Burger said.

Germany's top disease control official said the origin of the contamination was still believed to be the small organic farm in Lower Saxony which first came under suspicion at the weekend.

"The links are ever clearer - it's a hot lead," he told reporters in Berlin, at a joint news conference with the heads of Germany's federal institute for risk assessment and federal office for consumer protection.

He said it was possible that all tainted sprouts had now either been consumed or thrown away, but he warned the crisis was not yet over.

"There will be new cases coming up," he said.

"Thousands of tests carried out on tomatoes, cucumbers and lettuce have proved negative," he added.

Lower Saxony agriculture minister Gert Lindemann said earlier this week that experts had found no traces of the E. coli bacterium strain at the Bienenbuettel farm but he did not rule it out as the source of the contamination.

In an interview to be published in next week's edition of Focus magazine, Mr Lindemann said some 60 of the people taken ill had eaten sprouts from the farm, which employs about 15 people.

Contamination might have been caused by contaminated seeds or "poor hygiene", he added.

Ban to be lifted

The agreement to lift the Russian ban was announced after talks between top EU officials including the Commission chief, Jose Manuel Barroso, and Russian counterparts in the central Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod.

Health advice

  • Wash fruit and vegetables before eating them
  • Peel or cook fruit and vegetables
  • Wash hands regularly to prevent person-to-person spread of E. coli strain

Source: UK Health Protection Agency

"We are ready to resume the shipments under guarantees of the EU authorities," President Dmitry Medvedev told reporters.

Russia's top food safety officer, Gennady Onishchenko, said Russia would lift its prohibition after receiving food safety guarantees from the European Commission.

Mr Barroso said the EU would send a form for issuing food safety certificates to Russia in the next few days.

According to the Commission, the total value of EU exports of fresh vegetables to Russia is 600m euros (£530m; $870m) a year, a quarter of the total exported.

Spain, France, Germany and Poland are the biggest exporters.

More on This Story

Friday 19 November 2010

ECOLI INFECTION LINKED TO LONG TERM HEALTH PROBLEMS

ECOLI INFECTION LINKED TO LONG TERM HEALTH PROBLEMS
Local Scientists publish additional results from Walkerton Health Study
LONDON, Ontario – People who contract gastroenteritis from drinking water contaminated with
E coli are at an increased risk of developing high blood pressure, kidney problems and heart
disease in later life, finds a study published on bmj.com today.
The findings underline the importance of ensuring a safe food and water supply and the need
for regular monitoring for those affected.
It is estimated that E coli O157:H7 infections cause up to 120,000 gastro-enteric illnesses
annually in the US alone, resulting in over 2,000 hospitalizations and 60 deaths. However, the
long term health effects of E coli infection in adults are largely unknown.
A team of researchers from Lawson Health Research Institute (Lawson) and The University of
Western Ontario (Western) assessed the risk for hypertension, renal impairment and
cardiovascular disease within eight years of gastroenteritis from drinking contaminated water.
The team used data from the Walkerton Health Study, the first study to evaluate long term
health after an outbreak of gastroenteritis in May 2000 when a municipal water system became
contaminated with E coli O157:H7 and Campylobacter bacteria.
Study participants were surveyed annually and underwent a physical examination and
laboratory assessment to track their long term health.
Of 1,977 adult participants, 1,067 (54%) experienced acute gastroenteritis, of which 378 sought
medical attention.
Compared with participants who were not ill or only mildly ill during the outbreak, participants
who experienced acute gastroenteritis were 1.3 times more likely to develop hypertension, 3.4
times more likely to develop renal impairment, and 2.1 times more likely to have a
cardiovascular event, such as a heart attack or stroke.
“Our findings underline the need for following up individual cases of food or water poisoning by
E coli O157:H7 to prevent or reduce silent progressive vascular injury,” says Dr. William Clark,
Scientist at Lawson, Nephrologist at London Health Sciences Centre and Professor of
Nephrology at Western. “These long term consequences emphasize the importance of
ensuring safe food and water supply as a cornerstone of public health.”

Saturday 19 September 2009

e coli 2

E.coli inquiry shuts second farm

Godstone Farm and Playbarn
Godstone Farm was closed to the publi
A second farm linked to a children's animal attraction at the centre of an E.coli outbreak has agreed to close amid criticism over its hygiene regime.
Horton Park Children's Farm in Epsom - a "sister farm" to Godstone Farm - now linked to 40 cases of E.coli - has agreed to close voluntarily.
Hygiene arrangements there were found to be unsatisfactory, the Health Protection Agency has said.
A letter at Horton Park's entrance stressed it had no E.coli cases.
But a spokeswoman for the Health Protection Agency (HPA) said: "The hygiene arrangements were found to be unsatisfactory and the HPA advised the local authority that the farm should be closed immediately while these defects were rectified."
She confirmed that officials were not aware of any cases of E.coli O157 linked to Horton Park, which has the same owners as Godstone Farm.
The letter displayed at the entrance to the farm said it had closed as a temporary measure "owing to concerns expressed by us and others, and due to the slight risk to our customers of the chance of disease".
'Precautionary measure'
It said the farm would remain closed until everything had been done to eliminate or reduce any potential risk to customers and friends.
It added: "Horton Farm has had no suspected or actual cases of E.coli and that this is a precautionary measure."
Midge McCall, a spokeswoman for Epsom and Ewell Borough Council, said the HPA had asked the council's environmental health team to inspect Horton Park.


Closure notice at Horton Park farm entrance
A notice at Horton Park said the closure was a precautionary move
She said: "Following subsequent advice from the HPA, the children's farm in Horton Lane, Epsom, has decided to close temporarily as a precautionary measure."
The 40 confirmed E.coli cases linked to Godstone Farm include 14 children who are in hospital.
Four of the youngsters are seriously ill, seven are in a stable condition, and three are improving.
A pair of two-year-old twins from Paddock Wood in Kent - Aaron and Todd Furnell - have suffered acute kidney failure.
On Wednesday, the chief executive of the HPA, Justin McCracken, telephoned the parents of some of the children most affected by the outbreak to apologise to them in person about delays in closing Godstone Farm.


Twins Todd [left] and Aaron [right] have acute kidney failure
Twins Todd [left] and Aaron Furnell are in a stable condition in hospital
Initially, the agency said the first case came to light on 27 August, but it later emerged it had received a report of two cases in the previous week.
Mr McCracken said the position the families had found themselves in was unbearable and what had happened "might have been avoidable".
An independent investigation into the handling of the outbreak has been commissioned.
A press statement issued by Richard Oatway on behalf of Godstone Farm said all the staff were very upset about the outbreak and hoped everyone made a full and speedy recovery.
Mr Oatway said he and a Mrs Flaherty had run Godstone Farm since 1980.
He added: "Our main priority has always been to make sure that the farm is safe for everyone who comes here to visit.
"This included our own children and grandchildren.
"We have cooperated fully with all the authorities from the very beginning and will of course continue to do so."


The closure of Horton Park Children's Farm, in Epsom is over hygiene concerns

E,Coli

More E.coli cases linked to farm

Godstone Farm and Playbarn
Godstone Farm was closed to the public on Saturday
Five more people have contracted E.coli in an outbreak linked to a children's farm in Surrey.
Of 45 confirmed cases, 12 are children being treated in hospital. Four of them are seriously ill, six are in a stable condition and two more are improving.
Godstone Farm was closed to the public on Saturday following the outbreak.
Its sister farm, Horton Park in Epsom, closed voluntarily after the Health Protection Agency (HPA) found hygiene arrangements to be unsatisfactory.
The HPA advised the local authority that the farm be closed immediately while the "defects were rectified".
A spokeswoman for Horton Park Children's Farm said the decision to close the farm on Wednesday evening was made because of the perceived "slight risk" of more children contracting E.coli.
The letter displayed at the entrance to the farm said it had closed as a temporary measure "owing to concerns expressed by us and others, and due to the slight risk to our customers of the chance of disease".
HPA officials are not aware of any cases of E.coli linked to Horton Park farm.
Since the outbreak the HPA has apologised to parents for delays in closing Godstone Farm and an independent investigation has begun.

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