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Follow on Google News | US Food Safety Hazard: Cantaloupe Caused Listeria Food PoisoningThe US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) confirmed the presence of strains of listeria in cantaloupe samples. Currently, there are 33 additional illnesses and 29 deaths reported to be linked to the ongoing outbreak of listeria food poisoning.
By: Jim Cook The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment reported it had nine cases of listeriosis including two deaths on September 2, 2011 prompting the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to commence an urgent investigation of the multiple state outbreak in which cantaloupe was the suspected infection vehicle. On September 10, 2011 the FDA and Colorado state officials visited cantaloupe producer Jensen Farms to collect multiple samples. Of the 30 swabs taken, 13 were confirmed positive for L. monocytogenes with pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) pattern combinations matching three of the four outbreak strains. In addition, cantaloupes from the firm’s cold storage area confirmed positive for the bacteria with PFGE pattern combinations matching two of the four outbreak strains. The FDA identified several factors that most likely caused the introduction, spread and growth of L. monocytogenes at Jensen Farms. The problem may have been stemmed from bacteria in the field where the cantaloupes were grown or through contamination of the packing facility by a truck that hauled reject cantaloupes to a cattle operation. The bacteria may also have spread in water near the machinery and employee walkways, hard-to-clean floors and/or machinery in the packing facility, or from equipment previously used for other agricultural products. Bacteria growth is likely promoted by condensation, due to a missing pre-cooling step prior to cold storage. The FDA concluded that if the facility had followed the non-binding recommendations for minimizing microbial food safety hazards in melons, as published by the FDA in July 2009, these problems might have been avoided. Obligatory standards will soon be enforced under the Food Safety Modernization Act (http://www.fda.gov/ In all, four outbreak strains of L. monocytogenes were found in 26 US states, leading to 29 deaths and 33 additional illnesses. Settlements to the families may cost $150 million. About SGS Food Safety Services SGS, the global leader in third-party testing, provides food safety services (http://www.foodsafety.sgs.com) to the whole food supply chain, from farm to fork, to help assure that your products are fit for consumption. SGS has testing labs throughout the world that can test food products for L. monocytogenes. For more information on food safety and testing for L. monocytogenes, please contact our food experts. Contact details: SGS Consumer Testing Services Jim Cook Food Safety Technologist SGS – North America, Inc. 291 Fairfield Avenue, Fairfield, NJ 07004 t: +1 (973) 461-1493 E-Mail: cts.media@sgs.com Website: http://www.foodsafety.sgs.com SGS is the world’s leading inspection, verification, testing and certification company. SGS is recognized as the global benchmark for quality and integrity. With 67'000 employees, SGS operates a network of over 1'250 offices and laboratories around the world. # # # SGS Consumer Testing Services ensures the quality and safety of every kind of consumer products, from textiles, electronics and furniture to food and automotive. For more information, please visit: http://www.sgs.com/ End
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