Salmonella tests negative at Mexico cantaloupe plant amid outbreak
-officials
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[January 10, 2024]
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Tests were negative for traces of
salmonella at a cantaloupe-processing plant in Mexico amid an
investigation into a deadly outbreak in the United States and Canada,
Mexico said on Tuesday.
Mexican health officials in December ordered the temporary closure of
the plant in the northern state of Sonora and took samples from surfaces
and water.
Those samples were analyzed by a laboratory and did not detect the
presence of salmonella strains, Mexican agriculture and health
authorities said in a statement.
A new analysis of water, product and surface samples in production and
packaging plants will be carried out in February, the statement added.
At least 11 deaths in the United States and Canada have been linked to
the outbreak. Four deaths were reported by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) and seven were reported by Canada's public
health agency (PHAC).
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Cantaloupes are pictured at a fruit stall in Mexico City, Mexico, on
January 11, 2019. REUTERS/Daniel Becerril/File Photo
Health authorities in both countries
have implicated Mexico's Malichita- and Rudy-branded cantaloupes as
the sources of the outbreak and issued recalls of the fruit.
(Reporting by Cassandra Garrison; Editing by Mark Porter)
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