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Bagged Lettuce E Coli warning:10-8-06 New Warning - This time it is lettuce

dmcowen674

No Lifer
NEW WARNING 10-8-2006

This time it's lettuce

Lettuce recalled over E. coli

SAN FRANCISCO - Less than a week after the Food and Drug Administration lifted its warning on fresh spinach grown in California's Salinas Valley, a popular brand of lettuce grown there has been recalled over concerns about E. coli contamination.

The company initiated a voluntary recall Sunday of green leaf lettuce purchased last week under the Foxy brand name. Foxy is one of the nation's largest suppliers of lettuce, celery, broccoli, vegetable platters and stir-fry mixes.

The recall covered lettuce purchased in grocery stores Oct. 3-6 in Arizona, California, Nevada, Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. It was also sold to distributors in those states who may have sold it to restaurants.

The recalled lettuce was packaged as "Green Leaf 24 Count, waxed carton," and "Green Leaf 18 Count, cellophane sleeve, returnable carton." Packaging is stamped with lot code 6SL0024.




====================================================
WARNING

Throw out any bagged spinach until the word is given the distribution system is clean.

Washing the spinach will not kill the bacteria!!!

9-15-2006 Deadly Bagged Spinach E. coli outbreak hits 20 states

Even if you wash the spinach, you still could be at risk. Sober warnings for salad lovers came from federal health officials Friday as they struggled to pinpoint a multistate E. coli outbreak that killed one person and sickened nearly 100 more.

Bagged spinach ? the triple-washed, cello-packed kind sold by the hundreds of millions of pounds each year ? is the suspected source of the bacterial outbreak, Food and Drug Administration officials said.

The FDA warned people nationwide not to eat the spinach.

Washing won't get rid of the tenacious bug, though thorough cooking can kill it.

Supermarkets across the country pulled spinach from shelves, and consumers tossed out the leafy green.

"We're waiting for the all-clear. In the meantime, Popeye the Sailor Man and this family will not be eating bagged spinach," said Dr. William Schaffner, chairman of preventative medicine at Vanderbilt University. The Tennessee university's medical center was treating a 17-year-old Kentucky girl for E. coli infection.

By Friday, the outbreak had grown to include at least 20 states: California, Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Wisconsin accounted for 29 illnesses, about one-third of the cases, including the lone death.

"We are telling everyone to get rid of fresh bagged spinach right now. Don't assume anything is over," Gov. Jim Doyle said.

The bug has sickened at least 94 people across the nation, the CDC said. The agency added that 29 people have been hospitalized, 14 of them with kidney failure.

Initial suspicions focused on California's Monterey County. Farmers there grow more than half the nation's 500 million-pound spinach crop, according to the Agriculture Department.

"We're trying to get to the bottom of this and figure out what happened. Everybody is terribly concerned," said Dave Kranz, a spokesman for the California Farm Bureau Federation.

Anyone who has gotten sick after eating raw packaged spinach should contact a doctor, officials said.

Other bagged vegetables, including prepackaged salads, apparently are not affected.

 
Hmm. Do people wash bagged spinach? I just assumed it was prewashed.
Anyhow 94 sick and 1 dead is no reason to throw away perfectly good spinach, IMO.
 
Originally posted by: senseamp
Hmm.

Do people wash bagged spinach?

I just assumed it was prewashed.

Anyhow 94 sick and 1 dead is no reason to throw away perfectly good spinach, IMO.

It must be thoroughly cooked.

Washing will not kill the bacteria.

Washing will not kill the bacteria.

Washing will not kill the bacteria.

They are suspecting that the product was contimated during growth with cattle fertilizer.


 
Originally posted by: senseamp
Hmm. Do people wash bagged spinach? I just assumed it was prewashed.
Anyhow 94 sick and 1 dead is no reason to throw away perfectly good spinach, IMO.
From ABC News
Dodge E. Coli: Throw Away Your Spinach

Health Officials and Experts Advise Ditching Spinach Packages as E. Coli Cases Spread

By STEVE OSUNSAMI

Sept. 15, 2006
? It doesn't matter what brand of spinach. It doesn't matter how long it's been sitting in the refrigerator. If it comes in bag, the Food and Drug Administration is strongly encouraging consumers, from coast to coast, to throw it out.

Federal officials blame the bagged, grocery store spinach for what has now turned into a massive E.Coli outbreak, responsible for hospitalizing residents in at least 20 states. (So far, according the U.S. Centers for Disease Control: California, Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming, ). One person has died, a 77-year old woman in Wisconsin. Dozens of people have fallen seriously ill. There have been at least 14 cases of kidney failure.

Natural Selection Foods, which produces packaged products under the label "Earthbound Farm Organic" has announced a voluntary recall for spinach products with sell by dates August 17 through October 21. Earthbound Farm is the nation's grower of organic produce. It is in 74 percent of grocery stores nationwide and last reported to have $450 million in revenue.

Dr. David Acheson, with the Center for Food and Safety and Applied Nutrition says, "the cases are increasing by the day."
If you aren't sure YOUR bagged spinach isn't part of the recall from Natural Selection Foods, and you don't think that's a reason to toss it, I'd have to ask if you've ever heard of the Darwin Awards?
We salute the improvement of the human genome by honoring those who remove themselves from it. Of necessity, this honor is generally bestowed posthumously.
Are you volunteering to be a nominee? :shocked:
 
I wonder how many people who got sick and didn't contact a doctor because he/she had no health insurance. Or even if you did have it, just going to the ER for a few hours is going to cost around five hundred dollars. Thanks bush!!!


Edit:

This just in... bush thinks the terroists are now growing a new strain of spinach with e. coli in it!!! Damn! Don't drink the water!!!! 🙂

 
Originally posted by: ericlp
I wonder how many people who got sick and didn't contact a doctor because he/she had no health insurance. Or even if you did have it, just going to the ER for a few hours is going to cost around five hundred dollars. Thanks bush!!!

Let's save the Politics until after the crisis has passed.
 
Originally posted by: Harvey
Originally posted by: senseamp
Hmm. Do people wash bagged spinach? I just assumed it was prewashed.
Anyhow 94 sick and 1 dead is no reason to throw away perfectly good spinach, IMO.
From ABC News
Dodge E. Coli: Throw Away Your Spinach

Health Officials and Experts Advise Ditching Spinach Packages as E. Coli Cases Spread

By STEVE OSUNSAMI

Sept. 15, 2006
? It doesn't matter what brand of spinach. It doesn't matter how long it's been sitting in the refrigerator. If it comes in bag, the Food and Drug Administration is strongly encouraging consumers, from coast to coast, to throw it out.

Federal officials blame the bagged, grocery store spinach for what has now turned into a massive E.Coli outbreak, responsible for hospitalizing residents in at least 20 states. (So far, according the U.S. Centers for Disease Control: California, Connecticut, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming, ). One person has died, a 77-year old woman in Wisconsin. Dozens of people have fallen seriously ill. There have been at least 14 cases of kidney failure.

Natural Selection Foods, which produces packaged products under the label "Earthbound Farm Organic" has announced a voluntary recall for spinach products with sell by dates August 17 through October 21. Earthbound Farm is the nation's grower of organic produce. It is in 74 percent of grocery stores nationwide and last reported to have $450 million in revenue.

Dr. David Acheson, with the Center for Food and Safety and Applied Nutrition says, "the cases are increasing by the day."
If you aren't sure YOUR bagged spinach isn't part of the recall from Natural Selection Foods, and you don't think that's a reason to toss it, I'd have to ask if you've ever heard of the Darwin Awards?
We salute the improvement of the human genome by honoring those who remove themselves from it. Of necessity, this honor is generally bestowed posthumously.
Are you volunteering to be a nominee? :shocked:

We are all nominees, whether we volunteer or not.
Maybe someone gets scared of spinach, buys lettuce instead and chokes on it. Then who'll be the Darwin award winner?
 
Originally posted by: ericlp
I wonder how many people who got sick and didn't contact a doctor because he/she had no health insurance. Or even if you did have it, just going to the ER for a few hours is going to cost around five hundred dollars. Thanks bush!!!


Edit:

This just in... bush thinks the terroists are now growing a new strain of spinach with e. coli in it!!! Damn! Don't drink the water!!!! 🙂

I love sad malformed illconcieved responses.....people having no health insurance goes back further than good ole BUSH!!
 
Originally posted by: senseamp
Originally posted by: Harvey
Originally posted by: senseamp
Hmm. Do people wash bagged spinach? I just assumed it was prewashed.
Anyhow 94 sick and 1 dead is no reason to throw away perfectly good spinach, IMO.
From ABC News

If you aren't sure YOUR bagged spinach isn't part of the recall from Natural Selection Foods, and you don't think that's a reason to toss it, I'd have to ask if you've ever heard of the Darwin Awards?
We salute the improvement of the human genome by honoring those who remove themselves from it. Of necessity, this honor is generally bestowed posthumously.
Are you volunteering to be a nominee? :shocked:

We are all nominees, whether we volunteer or not.
Maybe someone gets scared of spinach, buys lettuce instead and chokes on it. Then who'll be the Darwin award winner?
There's little most people can do to avoid the odds of encountering some obscure misfortune, but the odds are strongly in against those who volunteer for idiocy by ignoring the big flashing warning signs. Which are you? 😛
 
Originally posted by: alchemize
That which does not kill me makes me stronger, had a nice spinach salad tonight.




Of course, it was organic 😀
Of course, you read my previous post with the link to the story on ABC News]http://www.abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=2449681[/l]:
Natural Selection Foods, which produces packaged products under the label "Earthbound Farm Organic" has announced a voluntary recall for spinach products with sell by dates August 17 through October 21. Earthbound Farm is the nation's grower of organic produce. It is in 74 percent of grocery stores nationwide and last reported to have $450 million in revenue.
Here... You need this... :beer: :beer: :beer: Maybe the alcohol will kill the bugs. 😛

FYI, it only applies to bagged spinach, not fresh bunches of spinach in the produce section of your neighborhood market... over there... by the green onions and radishes... for $.39 a bunch. 😎
 
DOH!

Hmm, well mine was in the box not the bag 😀 Same distributor. I've been eating this box for 3 days so I think I'll pull through...

I don't care for the bags, it seems to wilt faster than the plastic box or a good bunch.

Maybe I'll go find some e-coli cultures and join the lawsuit bandwagon?
 
Originally posted by: alchemize
That which does not kill me makes me stronger, had a nice spinach salad tonight.




Of course, it was organic 😀

Even a paralyzing spinal cord injury? 😛
 
This is obviously just another one of Dave's paranoid delusions. I just ate a whole bowl full of spinach a few days ago, and I'm fine. I didn't get sick at all unless you count my short-lived high fever followed by a sharp drop in temperature to ambient and cessation of pulse coupled with a strong, irresistable urge to devour human flesh and especially brains, yummy, juicy, brainsssss...
 
To Dave: :thumbsup: for this thread
and a :cookie: for the "Let's save the Politics until after the crisis has passed. " comment.

I think this transcends politics, remember the good ole' days when everything wasn't politics?
 
I'm going to call my mom:

"remember how you used to force feed me spinach when i was a kid saying how healthy it was? WERE YOU TRYING TO KILL ME!?!?!?" 😀
 
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