Salmonella outbreak linked to raw turkey
leaves over 200 sick across U.S.
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[December 22, 2018]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - More than 200 people from
across the United States have fallen ill, 84 of them hospitalized, from
an ongoing salmonella outbreak linked to raw turkey products that
prompted a second voluntary recall on Friday, the U.S. government said.
The latest food-safety advisory from the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta came as millions of Americans
planned their Christmas holiday menus, updating a notice for
contaminated turkey issued in early November.
Since then, 52 more people in 26 states and the District of Columbia
have become sick from salmonella-tainted turkey, bringing the total
number of documented cases to 216 in 38 states and the district. One
death from the outbreak, which began in October, was reported in
California, the CDC said.
The Public Health Agency of Canada has reported an additional 22
turkey-related salmonella infections in four provinces - British
Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba and New Brunswick - believed to be linked to
the U.S. outbreak.
The common strain of salmonella associated with the illnesses has been
identified in various raw turkey products, including ground turkey,
turkey patties, live turkeys and raw turkey pet food, indicating it may
be widespread in the turkey industry.
No single supplier has been identified.
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Minnesota-based Jennie-O Turkey Store Sales LLC on Friday
voluntarily recalled more than 164,000 pounds of ground turkey
products. The company had recalled more than 91,000 pounds in
mid-November over the same outbreak.
With the exception of the recalled Jennie-O brand ground turkey, the
CDC said it was not advising consumers to avoid eating properly
cooked turkey products or for retailers to stop selling raw turkey
products.
Anyone can become sick from salmonella bacteria, but young children,
the elderly or people with weakened immune systems are at a higher
risk of serious illness.
Symptoms, which typically appear 12 to 72 hours after ingesting the
bacteria, include diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps. Most people
recover within a week.
Infection can best be prevented by thorough washing hands after
handling poultry, by cooking turkey to an internal temperature of
165 degrees Fahrenheit, and by thawing frozen turkeys in the
refrigerator rather than at room temperature, the CDC said.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Joseph
Radford)
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