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Teh One Who Knocks
08-04-2011, 01:00 PM
By MARY CLARE JALONICK, Associated Press


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WASHINGTON – Meat giant Cargill is recalling 36 million pounds of turkey after a government hunt for the source of a salmonella outbreak that has killed one person in California and sickened dozens more.

The Agriculture Department and the Minnesota-based company announced Wednesday evening that Cargill is recalling fresh and frozen ground turkey products produced at the company's Springdale, Ark., plant from Feb. 20 through Aug. 2 due to possible contamination from the strain of salmonella linked to 76 illnesses and the one death.

Illnesses in the outbreak date back to March and have been reported in 26 states coast to coast. Both the Agriculture Department and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are still working to identify the source. Meanwhile, the Agriculture Department has warned consumers to properly cook ground turkey.

Just before the recall announcement Wednesday, CDC epidemiologist Christopher Braden said he thought health authorities were closing in on the suspect. He said some leftover turkey in a package at a victim's house was confirmed to contain the strain of salmonella linked to the outbreak.

In announcing the recall, Cargill officials said all ground turkey production has been suspended at the Springdale plant until the company is able to determine the source of the contamination.

"Given our concern for what has happened, and our desire to do what is right for our consumers and customers, we are voluntarily removing our ground turkey products from the marketplace," said Steve Willardsen, president of Cargill's turkey processing business.

The Minnesota-based company said it was initiating the recall after its own internal investigation, an Agriculture Department investigation and the information about the illnesses released by the CDC this week.

All of the packages recalled include the code "Est. P-963," according to Cargill. The packages were labeled with many different brands, including Cargill's Honeysuckle White.

According to food safety attorney Bill Marler, who publishes a database of outbreak statistics, the ground turkey recall is one of the largest meat recalls ever.

A chart on the CDC's website shows cases have occurred every month since early March, with spikes in May and early June. The latest reported cases were in mid-July, although the CDC said some recent cases may not have been reported yet. The CDC said the strain is resistant to many commonly prescribed antibiotics, which can make treatment more difficult.

The states reporting the highest number sickened are Michigan and Ohio, with 10 each. Texas has reported nine illnesses; Illinois, seven; California, six; and Pennsylvania, five.

Twenty states have one to three reported illnesses linked to the outbreak, according to the CDC. They are Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Iowa, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wisconsin.

The CDC estimates that 50 million Americans each year get sick from food poisoning, including about 3,000 who die. Salmonella causes most of these cases, and federal health officials say they've made virtually no progress against it.

Government officials say that even contaminated ground turkey is safe to eat if it is cooked to 165 degrees. But it's also important that raw meat be handled properly before it is cooked and that people wash their hands with soap for at least 20 seconds before and after handling the meat. Turkey and other meats should also be properly refrigerated or frozen and leftovers heated.

The most common symptoms of salmonella are diarrhea, abdominal cramps and fever within eight to 72 hours of eating a contaminated product. It can be life-threatening to some with weakened immune systems.

Cargill executive Willardsen said, "Public health and the safety of consumers cannot be compromised."

"It is regrettable that people may have become ill from eating one of our ground turkey products," he said, "and, for anyone who did, we are truly sorry."

AntZ
08-10-2011, 09:51 PM
Government Knew About Bacteria in Turkey

Published August 10, 2011 | The Wall Street Journal




Federal officials said they turned up a dangerous form of salmonella at a Cargill Inc. turkey plant last year, and then four times this year at stores selling the Cargill turkey, but didn't move for a recall until an outbreak killed one person and sickened 77 others.

Cargill and the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced the recall of ground turkey from the Cargill plant in Springdale, Ark., on Aug. 3. The USDA said the third-largest meat recall in history affected 36 million pounds of ground turkey.

Food-safety specialists said the delay reflected a gap in federal rules that don't treat salmonella as a poisonous contaminant, even if inspectors find antibiotic-resistant forms such as the Heidelberg strain implicated in the latest outbreak.

"We have constraints when it comes to salmonella," said Elisabeth Hagen, the USDA's top food-safety official, in an interview. She said that unlike E. coli, salmonella isn't officially considered a dangerous adulterant in meat unless that meat is directly tied to an illness or death.

A routine USDA inspection last year of the Cargill plant in Arkansas turned up three samples contaminated with salmonella Heidelberg, the agency said. A USDA spokesman said the agency brought the findings "to the attention of the facility."

Meat plants are expected to pass a performance standard that allows up to 49.9 percent of tests to come back positive for salmonella. A Cargill spokesman said the Arkansas plant had passed all USDA performance standards despite what he called "routine" findings of salmonella Heidelberg.

More warning signs emerged in April from tests by the federal government's National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System, which examines meat samples in retail stores. Researchers from Narms found salmonella Heidelberg in a package of ground turkey that came from the Cargill Arkansas plant.

In May, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began investigating clusters of salmonella Heidelberg illnesses that had begun in March. Antibiotic-resistant forms of salmonella such as Heidelberg have become a serious health problem because they cannot be treated with some common antibiotics. If untreated, infections can be fatal.

deebakes
08-10-2011, 09:56 PM
wow...

JoeyB
08-10-2011, 11:05 PM
Nothing new or shocking, this from the meat industry that has lobbied hard to make the FDA virtually powerless against them. Meanwhile, the meat industry is still trying to reduce the already fragile powers the FDA wields, because apparently even incredibly weakened safety standards 'hurt business'. Fuckwads. I'm a vegetarian, and happy about it.

Just a warning, all those hot dogs and hamburgers you eat now contain waste that used to be deemed unfit for human consumption. But the meat industry wanted to up their profits, and managed to have the laws changed so that all that garbage goes right into your food, even the so called '100% beef'. Remember, beef is any part of the fucking cow. So how do they make this crap that is unfit for human consumption 'safe'? By using Ammonia to treat it. Yes, deadly ammonia. Enjoy!

AntZ
08-10-2011, 11:08 PM
Mmmmm...Ammonia! :tup:


http://i.imgur.com/HY96a.jpg

Teh One Who Knocks
08-10-2011, 11:17 PM
Nothing new or shocking, this from the meat industry that has lobbied hard to make the FDA virtually powerless against them. Meanwhile, the meat industry is still trying to reduce the already fragile powers the FDA wields, because apparently even incredibly weakened safety standards 'hurt business'. Fuckwads. I'm a vegetarian, and happy about it.

Just a warning, all those hot dogs and hamburgers you eat now contain waste that used to be deemed unfit for human consumption. But the meat industry wanted to up their profits, and managed to have the laws changed so that all that garbage goes right into your food, even the so called '100% beef'. Remember, beef is any part of the fucking cow. So how do they make this crap that is unfit for human consumption 'safe'? By using Ammonia to treat it. Yes, deadly ammonia. Enjoy!

More for me :dance:

JoeyB
08-10-2011, 11:20 PM
And this is exactly why the meat industry gets away with it...the meat eaters don't care about their own health.

Teh One Who Knocks
08-10-2011, 11:22 PM
Last time I looked, I'm nowhere near deaths door :-k

Teh One Who Knocks
08-10-2011, 11:23 PM
And my grandfather on my father's side of the family was nothing but a meat eater and he lived to 95

AntZ
08-10-2011, 11:24 PM
And this is exactly why the meat industry gets away with it...the meat eaters don't care about their own health.

I just rode to the top of the Mont Ventoux last month, that evening, I went to a French restaurant and had a steak dinner! Never felt better!

Teh One Who Knocks
08-10-2011, 11:27 PM
I just rode to the top of the Mont Ventoux last month, that evening, I went to a French restaurant and had a steak dinner! Never felt better!

:agreed:

JoeyB
08-10-2011, 11:32 PM
And my grandfather on my father's side of the family was nothing but a meat eater and he lived to 95

I'm talking about the fact that you don't care what the meat industry is dumping in your burgers and hot dogs. Even when you are told, you just laugh it off. This is why they get away with it.