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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query food poisoning. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query food poisoning. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, April 10, 2009

CDC Says Little Progress In U.S. Food Safety

The Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta says Americans did not suffer more food poisoning in 2008, despite high-profile cases like the peanut butter salmonella outbreak linked to a south Georgia plant. But a new CDC study also warns that Georgia and a handful of other states have made little—if any-progress in food safety over the past four years.

The study’s key statement is this: The U.S. has "reached a plateau in the prevention of food-borne disease." It calls for new efforts to make food safer from the farm to the table.

The CDC’s study looked at 10 states, including Georgia. It showed the number of food-borne infections declining over the past decade. But, by 2004 they leveled-off. And Georgia in particular has the second-highest rate of salmonella among the 10 states.

That’s due in part to the latest salmonella outbreak at a peanut plant in Blakely, which sickened nearly 700 people nationwide.

State lawmakers answered that alarm in the just-completed legislative session by overwhelmingly passing a bill to toughen food safety rules and regulations. State Republican Senator John Bulloch says the bill he co-sponsored is a good start:
"The tools that we put in place for the Dept of Agriculture is a great improvement over what they had before. Do the things need to be changed?...we don’t know. It may be that next year we need to come back as we see how these new changes have been implemented and what results they have, and maybe there are some other things that need to be changed."
Bulloch says changes already made within the state’s Agriculture Department include an additional five food inspectors in the field, with three of those positions newly-created by the Legislature.

But Bulloch also points out that Georgia should not be taking all the blame for failures in the inspection pipeline:
"At what point does the Food and Drug Administration…where’s their responsibilities? Have they done and have been doing a good job? And I’d say no, they need to change their rules and regulations."
Federal food safety officials say they’re using new tools in an aggressive approach toward reducing food-contamination.

Here in Georgia, Bulloch believes things will get better:
"I would say that going forward, the consuming public should have a higher level of confidence that the products that go to the grocery shelf would be from a Georgia-facility would be by far safer than it could have been in the past."
Senate Bill-80 toughening Georgia’s food safety rules and regulations, awaits Governor Sonny Perdue’s signature.


Sunday, January 25, 2009

More Salmonella Deaths From Peanut Butter (Video)

The Ohio Department of Health announced Friday that four deaths have been reported among the 67 cases and 19 people have been hospitalized.

Sixty-seven cases of salmonella poisoning have been reported in Ohio, the most in any state during a nationwide outbreak linked to peanut butter products.

Ohio has now surpassed California in the number of cases reported.




There are six reported food poisoning cases in Georgia so far, but no deaths.

As the recall of salmonella-tainted peanut butter products widens, a Washington state lawyer is now calling on the Virginia-based Peanut Corporation of America to pay funeral costs for several of those who died from food poisoning.

PCA officials say they’re laying off nearly all of the workers at the Blakely facility, and will only keep several managers on duty.

Local officials say 40 to 50 people are employed at the plant.


(Source: CDC)
"As of 9PM EDT, Wednesday, January 22, 2009, 491 persons infected with the outbreak strain of Salmonella Typhimurium have been reported from 43 states. The number of ill persons identified in each state is as follows: Alabama (1), Arizona (10), Arkansas (4), California (62), Colorado (12), Connecticut (9), Georgia (6), Hawaii (3), Idaho (11), Illinois (6), Indiana (4), Iowa (2), Kansas (2), Kentucky (3), Maine (4), Maryland (8), Massachusetts (42), Michigan (25), Minnesota (35), Missouri (9), Mississippi (3), Nebraska (1), New Hampshire (11), New Jersey (19), New York (18), Nevada (5), North Carolina (6), North Dakota (10), Ohio (67), Oklahoma (2), Oregon (7), Pennsylvania (14), Rhode Island (4), South Dakota (2), Tennessee (9), Texas (6), Utah (5), Vermont (4), Virginia (20), Washington (13), West Virginia (2), Wisconsin (3), and Wyoming (2). Additionally, one ill person was reported from Canada."


(Source: CDC)

As the salmonella recall of products containing peanut butter continues to expand, a Washington state lawyer is calling on the company with Georgia operations to pay funeral costs for the six people believed to have died from the outbreak.

That comes as Virginia-based Peanut Corporation of America announced it's laying off the majority of it's workforce.

Click here for more on this developing story.

(With John Sepulvado and the AP)

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Blakeley Peanut Plant Halts Production Over Salmonella Outbreak


"Peanut Proud:" Blakeley City Hall. (Dave Bender/file)

A peanut butter maker with a plant in southwest Georgia has stopped production. The move comes after a string of food poisoning incidents.

"PEANUT CORPORATION OF AMERICA... HAS ANNOUNCED A VOLUNTARY RECALL OF PEANUT BUTTER PRODUCED IN ITS BLAKELEY, GEORGIA PROCESSING FACILITY," a recording on a PCA hotline said.
Officials at PCA say they're cooperating with a Food and Drug Administration investigation.

FDA officials say salmonella-tainted peanut butter has killed three people in Virginia and Minnesota, and sickened some 400 others in 42 states since last fall.

The company is voluntarily recalling all of their "King Nut" and "Parnell's Pride," commercial peanut butter batches nationwide.

The company says about 1,000 cases went out to restaurants and institutions, and were not sold directly to consumers.

The recall is taking place as the 33rd annual Georgia Peanut Farm Show opens in Albany on Thursday.

Organizers say they expect to host some 1,500 industry officials and local farmers at the day-long event.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of previous similar food poisoning incidents.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

GA added to nationwide 'no raw tomato' list

Georgia joins five other states which have been added to the nationwide raw tomato ban. Along with Georgia, the other states are Florida, Missouri, New York, Tennessee and Vermont - bringing the number of affected states to 23. The US Food and Drug Administration still hasn't pinpointed the source of the outbreak. And with the latest known illness striking on June 1, officials also aren't sure if all the tainted tomatoes are off the market. The toll from salmonella-tainted tomatoes has jumped to 228 illnesses. The government has learned of five dozen previously unknown cases - and says it's possible the food poisoning contributed to the death of a cancer patient in Texas.

Friday, June 12, 2009

GPB Radio's Georgia Gazette June 12, 2009


Join host Rickey Bevington tonight for Georgia Gazette. On tonight's show … a new food poisoning study ranks peanuts and poultry as major culprits – what it means for Georgia’s two largest ag industries. Imagine dozens of school buses racing through an obstacle course – we attend the Georgia Bus Drivers Road-eo. And music from a teenage piano virtuoso. These stories and more tonight on Georgia Gazette at 6, 7 in Athens, re-broadcast at 11, hear our show any time at www.gpb.org/georgiagazette , and download a free podcast on iTunes.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Georgia woman could have botulism

A Georgia woman could be the latest victim of a botulism outbreak. Today doctors are testing 20-year-old Anansar Ituen of Roswell after she complained of botulism poisoning symptoms. Her mother says she had eaten a food recalled because of botulism fears. The company, Castleberry’s Foods, has closed its Augusta plant where the bacteria may have gotten into food products. For a complete list of recalled foods, visit www.castleberrys.com

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Insecticide killed cattle in south Georgia--GBI on case

35 cattle that died on a Clinch County farm recently ingested an insecticide. Test results back from the state Department of Agriculture show three of the dead cattle had aldicarb in their system. Aldicarb is sold under the brand name Temik. It is an insecticide used on numerous crops.

From Georgia Commissioner of Agriculture Tommy Irvin:

"We tested feed from the trough where the cattle had eaten and found aldicarb. We also did a composite sample of ten unopened bags from the same lot of feed. This sample did not contain any traces of the insecticide," said Commissioner Irvin.

"This appears to be an isolated incident. The GBI (Georgia Bureau of Investigation) will investigate to determine if there was any criminal wrongdoing or if this was just a horrible accident. There was never any danger that any of the poisoned cows would get into the food chain," said Irvin.

The GBI was called into the case within the first 48 hours. Agent in charge of the investigation Jamie Karnes says they're looking at whether there was criminal intent in the poisoning.

"At this stage we're still going through information and identifying people that we might need to talk with for various reasons to get a better idea for what may have occurred, and for what reason".

The cows were buried accordance to state regulations with oversight by the state Department of Agriculture.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Peanut butter headed back to stores after outbreak

In a salmonella outbreak traced to a Georgia food plant, ConAgra Foods says Peter Pan peanut butter will return to stores this month. It was pulled from store shelves in February after several people got salmonella poisoning. ConAgra also recalled Great Value peanut butter. ConAgra says it has since renovated its plant in Sylvester, Georgia near Albany. ConAgra officials said this week they expect to resume peanut butter production at the company's plant in south Georgia sometime this month.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Peanut Butter Now Included in Recall

Federal investigators are concerned salmonella could be in yet more peanut products. The company at the center of the outbreak is expanding it's recall to include all peanut products made at it's Blakely, Ga., facilities since January of 2007.

Virginia-based Peanut Corporation of America issued the recall after it was revealed the company found salmonella in it's own testing and did not report it. The Food and Drug Administration also alleges PCA knowingly sold tainted product.

It's not yet clear what brands used PCA peanuts.

The FDA's Stephen Sudlof said on a conference call that his agency is working with various companies to aid in the recall:

"These additional products are being recalled because there is concern of potential salmonella contamination including contamination with salmonella strains not associated with the current outbreak."
Cases of salmonella poisoning have been dropping off, according to federal scientists. Over five hundred have been sickened, and eight people are believed to have died from the salmonella contamination.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of this story.

GPB News Team: