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Teh One Who Knocks
05-31-2011, 05:54 PM
by Frederic Happe


BERLIN (AFP) – Germany on Monday held crisis talks amid reports that at least 14 people have died and hundreds are ill in an outbreak of a highly virulent strain of bacteria found on imported cucumbers.

Belgium and Russia banned the import of vegetables from Spain, believed to be the source of at least some of the contaminated cucumbers. Madrid shot back saying it would seek financial compensation from the European Union for lost sales.

More than two weeks after the food poisoning outbreak was first reported in northern Germany, the number of confirmed and suspected cases has reached 1,200, according to media reports.

The Robert Koch Institute (RKI), Germany's national disease institute, said three deaths have been officially linked to the bacteria, but "in total about a dozen people have died according to regional authorities".

These authorities later Monday announced two more deaths: a woman of 50 and a man of 75 -- bringing the toll to at least 14.

The Stockholm-based European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control has described the outbreak of the strain of E. coli as "one of the largest worldwide and the largest ever reported in Germany".

Authorities in Germany warned against eating raw vegetables after traces of the bacteria were found on organic cucumbers from Spain last week.

But officials said they are unsure what caused the sudden outbreak of enterohaemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) which can result in full-blown haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS), a disease that causes bloody diarrhoea and serious liver damage and possible death.

The outbreak has hit countries including Britain, Denmark, Sweden and the Netherlands, but most these cases appear to involve people who had recently travelled to or from Germany.

"Normally we see about 1,000 cases per year, but we've now had some 1,200 cases in just 10 days," Jan Galle, director of the Luedenscheid clinic in western Germany, told ZDF public television.

"And we know that this time the EHEC strain is especially virulent and resistant, and has led to a very high number of HUS" cases, he added.

RKI has reported 329 confirmed HUS cases nationwide.

"Rapid identification of potential cases linked to this outbreak, within Germany or among persons who have travelled to Germany since the beginning of May, is essential to prevent the development of severe disease," the European disease control centre said in a statement Monday.

German Consumer Affairs Minister Ilse Aigner held emergency talks with Health Minister Daniel Bahr and regional state representatives, telling reporters the crisis has "taken a European dimension".

Burger said the source of the contamination had not been definitively identified.

Last week his organisation said a study had shown that all those affected had eaten significantly above-average amounts of tomatoes, lettuce and cucumbers.

European health officials said there was currently no indication that raw milk or meat is associated with the outbreak.

Many German supermarkets and shops removed all Spanish-grown vegetables from their shelves.

Spain in turn has hotly denied that its cucumbers were the cause of the outbreak and said it would seek compensation from the European Union for the "enormous damage" to its agriculture industry.

Belgium said it was blocking cucumber imports from Spain, while Russia said it was banning vegetable imports from both Spain and Germany.

The Netherlands, which usually exports vast amounts of vegetables to Germany, said sales had collapsed. German farmers also said consumers were boycotting their vegetables.

Doctors remained unsure how to treat the disease which can result in total kidney failure.

"We have 61 adults hospitalised, 21 in intensive care," a spokeswoman for the Eppendorf University Clinic in Hamburg, where most cases are being treated clinic, said Monday evening.

The clinic has appealed for blood donations.

"We are using between 500 and 700 bags of plasma per day, compared to 60 normally. We're running out of supplies," the spokeswoman said.

Rolf Stahl, a neurologist at the clinic, said nearly a third of patients there had lost all kidney functions and were on dialysis.

Doctors were experimenting with a new type of monoclonal antibodies drug, Eculizumab, which, while not officially approved, has been administered to 11 patients in a bid to save their lives.

"The infection source remains active and we have to reckon with a growing number of cases," Bahr said.

DemonGeminiX
05-31-2011, 05:57 PM
Lost sales? Your produce is killing people and you're worried about lost sales? You should be more worried about the cost of burying the people your produce killed.

AntZ
05-31-2011, 06:13 PM
We get a shit load of fruits and vegetables from Spain at our supermarkets too!


One nice thing, by law, all food must have the place of origin noted.

Loser
05-31-2011, 09:56 PM
I know this is a horrible tragedy, but all I can think of is that episode of 1000 ways to die. You know, the chick with the cucumber? :lol:

Hal-9000
05-31-2011, 09:58 PM
"Normally we see about 1,000 cases per year..."

that's 3 per day of food poisoning when things are going good :|

Teh One Who Knocks
05-31-2011, 10:02 PM
I know this is a horrible tragedy, but all I can think of is that episode of 1000 ways to die. You know, the chick with the cucumber? :lol:

:slap:


"Normally we see about 1,000 cases per year..."

that's 3 per day of food poisoning when things are going good :|

I never thought about it that way....that's not good either :wha:

Loser
05-31-2011, 10:03 PM
:slap:


Oh admit it, you did too. :lol:

DemonGeminiX
05-31-2011, 10:08 PM
I know this is a horrible tragedy, but all I can think of is that episode of 1000 ways to die. You know, the chick with the cucumber? :lol:

:-k

Do you mean the one where the chick is blowing a zucchini and steps on a garden hoe?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsqmOG8HMPA

Loser
05-31-2011, 11:03 PM
:lol:

yea, that one!

Hal-9000
05-31-2011, 11:13 PM
:lol:

yea, that one!

the only cucumber crisis you know about is when the produce section is out and you gotta use a hot dog :x










:lol: I'm so sorry

Teh One Who Knocks
05-31-2011, 11:14 PM
:-k

Do you mean the one where the chick is blowing a zucchini and steps on a garden hoe?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsqmOG8HMPA


:lol:

yea, that one!


the only cucumber crisis you know about is when the produce section is out and you gotta use a hot dog :x










:lol: I'm so sorry

Karma :nono:

Griffin
05-31-2011, 11:18 PM
So they didn't mention whether these cukes were ingested or if was a case of toxic shock syndrome.

Loser
06-01-2011, 12:22 AM
the only cucumber crisis you know about is when the produce section is out and you gotta use a hot dog :x

:lol: I'm so sorry


Made me think of this....


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDqiyeHwcvo


Oh, and :slap:

:lol:

Arkady Renko
06-01-2011, 11:58 AM
it's getting increasingly weird, the spaniards are off the hook for now, because the bacteria found on the spanish cucumbers are potentially lethal indeed, but not of the same type that keeps killing people here. And what's worse is that the source seems to be still active as the number of fresh cases is stable. Until they can figure it out I'm not going to eat produce away from home and rinse our own thoroughly. Yuck!

deebakes
06-01-2011, 10:51 PM
i can't help but find some humor in this story :oops:

Arkady Renko
06-03-2011, 10:25 AM
i can't help but find some humor in this story :oops:

what th' ehec ?

AntZ
06-03-2011, 04:27 PM
2 U.S. Military Members Sickened as E. Coli Outbreak 'Stabilizes' in Europe

Published June 03, 2011 | NewsCore



Two U.S. servicemembers based in Germany were suspected of being victims of Europe's E. coli outbreak Friday, as European authorities said the outbreak was "stabilizing."

U.S. military medical officers were awaiting test results from samples taken from the ill servicemembers -- and they could be confirmed late Friday or Monday, according to Phillip Tegtmeier, a spokesman for the US military's Europe Regional Medical Command.

"We're testing [for E. coli] as a precaution," he told military newspaper Stars and Stripes on Friday.

One of the U.S. servicemembers, an airman, remains in the hospital at the Spangahlem Air Base, in western Germany.

The other American reportedly affected was treated and released while based in Heidelberg, 48 miles south of Frankfurt.

The two suspected US military cases were among some 2,000 people hit by the E. coli outbreak across Europe, which so far claimed 18 lives, AFP reported.

The virus reportedly spread to a 12th country Friday, but all the deaths from the outbreak except one occurred in Germany. The other death, in Sweden, was a person who had just returned from Germany.

Authorities said they were no closer to identifying the origin of the outbreak Friday, but there were signs the number of infections was leveling out.

"The situation is that the number of new infections appears to be stabilizing somewhat," Reinhard Brunkhorst, president of the German Nephrology Society, told reporters in Hamburg, the epicenter of the scare.

But he added, "We are dealing here, in fact, with the biggest epidemic caused by bacteria in recent decades."

German chancellor Angela Merkel defended last week's false warning against organic Spanish cucumbers in a phone call Thursday with Spanish prime minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, saying that authorities were "duty-bound to inform the public at all times."

The advisory, retracted this week, left tens of thousands of tons of Spanish produce unsold, costing Spanish growers an estimated €200 million ($290 million) a week.

"Both leaders agreed that the priority now must be to identify the source of the [E. coli] outbreak in order to be able to take further measures to protect the public," Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said in a statement.

Russia, meanwhile, banned vegetable imports from the European Union in response to the scare, earning the ire of the European Commission, which called the move "disproportionate."

Scientific analysis has failed to show that contaminated vegetables are behind Europe's deadly E. coli outbreak, the EU's Reference Laboratory for E.coli in Rome said Friday.

"Alarmism over the consumption of vegetables is not justified ... since laboratory analyses do not support the hypothesis that contaminated vegetables were the source of the infection," the laboratory said in a statement.