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Walmart salad served by restaurant linked to parasitic infections; grocery store bagged salads still

foodsafetynews 2020-07-18
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With another 84 patients confirmed and an eighth state involved, an outbreak of Cyclospora infections linked to Fresh Express bagged salads sold by grocery stores is now being blamed for sickening restaurant patrons.

As of an updat today, federal officials are reporting 206 patients have been confirmed as infected by the Cyclospora parasite in the outbreak. The microscopic organism is often found on fresh produce that is eaten raw, especially lettuces and herbs such as cilantro. 

Public health officials are concerned that consumers may have unused portions of the implicated salads in their homes. Four bagged salad mixes have been recalled so far. Some of the salad products have use-by dates into July.

“Check your home for any of these recalled salads. Throw any remaining salad away, even if some of it has been eaten and no one has gotten sick,” according to the outbreak updat today from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“If you live in Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, or Wisconsin and don’t know whether the bagged salad mix you have in your home is one of these recalled salads, do not eat it. Throw it away.”

For patients with the information available, 23 people have been hospitalized. No deaths have been reported. Illnesses began on dates ranging from May 11 to June 17. Ill people range in age from 16 to 92 years old. It can take four to six weeks for confirmed lab results to reach the federal government, so outbreak investigators say it is likely that a number of patients have not yet been added to the total. The CDC updat says the most accurate numbers at this time are the ones from state health departments.

Since the outbreak was first announced on June 19, health officials have been saying implicated store-brand salads from four grocery chains are likely not the only sources of the parasite because of the wide distribution of Fresh Express products and the number of labels it is packaged under. Implicated store brands identified thus far are Marketside at Walmart; Little Salad Bar at Aldi; Hy-Vee self-branded garden salad; and Signature Farms sold at Jewel-Osco.

In the most recent state to be added to the outbreak list, North Dakota, there are 8 confirmed patients, all of whom ate at the same restaurant. Restaurant officials reported the salad was from Walmart, according to today’s notice from the CDC. The other states with patients are Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Wisconsin.

The CDC urges all consumers who used the implicated salads to monitor themselves for symptoms of Cyclospora infection. Symptoms start an average of seven days, with a range of two days to two weeks, after swallowing sporulated oocysts — the parasite at a specific stage of growth.

Symptoms may include watery diarrhea, loss of appetite, weight loss, cramping, bloating, increased gas, nausea, fatigue, vomiting, and low-grade fever. Without treatment, symptoms can persist for several weeks to a month. Some symptoms, such as diarrhea, can return. Some symptoms, such as fatigue, may continue after the gastrointestinal symptoms have gone away.

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