Jennie-O ground turkey linked to deadly Salmonella outbreak

Jennie-O Turkey Store Sales, LLC (Jennie-O) is recalling more than 45 tons (approximately 91,388 pounds) of raw ground turkey products that may be contaminated with a multidrug-resistant Salmonella Reading strain.

The Salmonella was recovered from an unopened package of Jennie-O raw ground turkey obtained from the home of an outbreak victim. The strain was a genetic match to the Salmonella Reading strain that has killed one person and sickened at least 164 people in 35 states.

The following recalled products were produced on September 11, 2018 and shipped to retail locations nationwide:

  • 1-lb. packages of “Jennie-O GROUND TURKEY 93% LEAN | 7% FAT” with “Use by” dates of 10/01/2018 and 10/02/2018.
  • 1-lb. packages of “Jennie-O TACO SEASONED GROUND TURKEY” with a “Use by” date of 10/02/2018.
  • 1-lb. packages of “Jennie-O GROUND TURKEY 85% LEAN | 15% FAT” with a “Use by” date of 10/02/2018.
  • 1-lb. packages of “Jennie-O ITALIAN SEASONED GROUND TURKEY” with a “Use by” date of 10/02/2018.

All of the recalled packages bear the establishment number P-190 inside the USDA mark of inspection. 

According to CDC, outbreak victims have reported eating different types and brands of turkey products purchased from many different locations. Three ill people lived in households where raw turkey pet food was fed to pets.

The USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) cautions that additional product from other companies may also be recalled.

CDC offers the following advice to consumers and retailers

Always handle raw turkey carefully and cook it thoroughly to prevent food poisoning. This outbreak is a reminder that raw turkey products can have germs that spread around food preparation areas and can make you sick.

CDC is not advising that consumers avoid eating properly cooked turkey products, or that retailers stop selling raw turkey products.

CDC advises consumers to follow these steps to help prevent Salmonella infection from raw turkey:

  • Wash your hands. Salmonella infections can spread from one person to another. Wash hands before and after preparing or eating food, after contact with animals, and after using the restroom or changing diapers.
  • Cook raw turkey thoroughly to kill harmful germs. Turkey breasts, whole turkeys, and ground poultry, including turkey burgers, casseroles, and sausage, should always be cooked to an internal temperature of 165°F to kill harmful germs. Leftovers should be reheated to 165°F. Use a food thermometer to check, and place it in the thickest part of the food.
  • Don’t spread germs from raw turkey around food preparation areas. Washing raw poultry before cooking is not recommended. Germs in raw poultry juices can spread to other areas and foods. Thoroughly wash hands, counters, cutting boards, and utensils with warm, soapy water after they touch raw turkey. Use a separate cutting board for raw turkey and other raw meats if possible.
  • Thaw turkey in the refrigerator, in a sink of cold water that is changed every 30 minutes, or in the microwave. Never thaw your turkey by leaving it out on the counter.
  • CDC does not recommend feeding raw diets to pets. Germs like Salmonella in raw pet food can make your pets sick. Your family also can get sick by handling the raw food or by taking care of your pet.

Recalls and Alerts: November 11 – 14, 2018

Here is today’s list of food safety recalls, product withdrawals, allergy alerts and miscellaneous compliance issues. The live links will take you directly to the official recall notices and company news releases that contain detailed information for each recall and alert.

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United States

Food Safety Recall: The Pictsweet Company recalls Pictsweet Farms brand Steam’ables Asparagus Spears (8 oz; Production codes beginning with 2138XD; BEST BY AUG 1, 2020; Product of USA; UPC 0 70560 97799 9) due to potential Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall: ALEBRIJE DIST WHOLESALE recalls Quesillo “Queseria La Milagrosa” and “Alebrije Cheese” (½ kg and 1kg) due to possible Salmonella contamination.

Food Safety Recall: Ron’s Home Style Foods recalls approximately 6,912 pounds of ready-to-eat (RTE) chicken salad products due to possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products, which were shipped to institutional and retail locations in Texas.

Canada

Allergy Alert: Buffets insère-jeunes recalls various baked goods due to undeclared milk, eggs, soy and sulfites. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Allergy Alert: Metro Alimentation Martin Duplessis Inc. recalls two pudding products due to undeclared wheat, gluten, sesame seeds, nuts and soy. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Food Safety Recall: Philippe Antoine traiteur inc. recalls Meat sauce (1L; All lots sold up to and including November 8, 2018) because the product may not be safe for consumption.

Food Safety Recall: Sobeys Inc. recalls various Safeway brand Ground Beef products due to foreign matter (metal pieces) contamination. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products, which were supplied to retail stores in British Columbia.

Europe

Allergy Alert (Belgium): Teker bvba recalls Teker Chicken Stek (800g; sold since 10/2017; various lot numbers and best before dates) due to undeclared gluten.

Allergy Alert (Belgium): Carrefour Belgique recalls Carrefour BIO velouté tomates basilic (300 mL; Lot #BIOTOM AH1029.3; Best before 03/01/2019) due to undeclared gluten.

Allergy Alert (Denmark): Lidl Danmark recalls Dulano Roasted Chicken Breast Filet, various flavors (80g; All Best before dates) due to undeclared mustard and celery.

Allergy Alert (Ireland): Walkers recalls Walkers Sensations Thai Sweet Chilli Flavour Crisps (40g; All Best before dates up to and including 29/01/2019) due to undeclared wheat (gluten).

Allergy Alert (UK): Walkers recalls Sensations Thai Sweet Chilli Flavour Potato Crisps (40g; and 73g Price Marked Pack (‘Only £1 RRP’); All best before dates up to and including 29 January 2019) due to undeclared wheat gluten.

Allergy Alert (UK-England specific): Gardiners of Scotland Ltd recalls Gardiners Scottish Macaroon Bars (85g; various batch codes and Best Before dates) due to undeclared soy. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected batches.

Food Safety Recall (Belgium – Update): Cora recalls Mini blinis cocktail x16 (135g; Lot #183451; Best before 19/11/2018) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Belgium): Importer recalls  Leader Price Mini blinis (135g; Lot #183451; Best before 19/11/2018) and Franprix Mini blinis (135g; Lot #183451; Best before 19/11/2018) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Belgium): FROM-UN recalls Jacquin brand Pouligny Saint Pierre au lait cru (250g; Lot #J82920094; Best before 08/12/18) due to Escherichia coli AEEC O26 contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Denmark): Graasten Salater recalls Mayo Horseradish Salad (150g; Best before 14.12.2018) due to foreign matter (plastic pieces) contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Denmark): Bon Appetit Group A/S recalls Hot-smoked salmon salad with pearl barley (302g; Best before 13.11.2018 – 18.11.2018) and Pasta penne smoked salmon & rucola pesto (390g; Best before 13.11.2018 – 15.11.2018) due to Listeria contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): Leader Price recalls Leader Price brand 16 Mini blinis (135g; Lot #183521; Best before 26/11/2018) due to Listeria contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): Eurial recalls Monoprix brand Pouligny St Pierre au lait cru de chèvre AOP (150g; Lot #Y 18 278 C; Best before 9 December 2018) due to E. coli O26 contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): Carrefour recalls CARREFOUR – SAPRESTI TAITEUR brand Coquille froide aux crevettes (Lot #18-311; Best before 19/11/2018) due to Listeria contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): La Société EURIAL recalls Bourdin brand Petit Pouligny Saint Pierre au lait cru (150g; Lot #Y18278C; Best before 09/12/18) due to E. coli O26 contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): La Société EURIAL recalls Auchan Mmm ! brand Petit Pouligny Saint Pierre au lait cru (150g; Lot #Y18278C; Best before 09/12/18) due to E. coli O26 contamination.

Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands

OUTBREAK ALERT (SINGAPORE): The Ministry of Health (MOH), National Environment Agency (NEA) and Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA) are investigating several cases of gastroenteritis traced to the consumption of food prepared at Spize Restaurant, located at 409 River Valley Road. As of 9 November 2018, a total of 49 cases were verified to be affected, and 21 cases have been hospitalised.

Food Safety Recall (Israel): Almadain Food Products (Madco) Ltd. recalls Jerusalem Deli Pastrami (200g & 400g packages; Expiration date 07/01/2019) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Australia and New Zealand

Allergy Alert (New Zealand): Serious Foods Co Ltd recalls Serious Popcorn brand Coconut and Vanilla (80g; Batch #ASM 307; Best before 04 December 2018) and Serious Popcorn brand Popping Corn (300g; Batch #ASM 257; Best before 31 May 2019) due to undeclared gluten.

Reality of our world: Money trumps altruism in the quest for safer poultry

This is part two of a two-part opinion piece by Carl Custer. It first appeared in Food Safety News and is reposted here with permission.

In the previous article, I wrote about the decades-old public health problem of poultry-borne salmonellosis. This article will propose declaring the virulent strains that are pathogenic to humans as adulterants and the benefits of doing so.

Regulatory policies for other foodborne pathogens recognize consumer’s inability to handle them. The Code of Federal regulations, 9 CFR 311.2-39 describes a number of conditions for declaring meat carcasses adulterated, including: tuberculosis, arthritis, and odors. The poultry regulations 9 CFR, 381.80 et seq are similar. The Meat Inspection Regulations, 9 CFR 315.2 permit some meat products that are found adulterated under 311 to be passed for cooking – under the oversight of federal inspections, not in consumers’ kitchens. In 1995, the top administrator of the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), Craig Reed, use that principle in his letter permitting lots of ground beef containing Escherichia coli O157:H7 to be cooked in a federal establishment – not in consumers’ kitchens.

Treatment of raw meat and poultry by cooking, irradiation, or high pressure processing would eliminate consumer exposure to those pathogens. However, one of the primary sources of foodborne pathogens now is contaminated produce. A growing body of scientific literature indicates a major source of these pathogens is food animal production via air 2, water 1, and manure 4. (These are only three recent papers of many). The 2018 meeting of the International Association for Food Protection (IAFP) in Salt Lake City had more than 20 sessions addressing preharvest contamination of soil, water and produce. There is also a large body of scientific literature on preharvest interventions in animals including isolation, competitive exclusion, probiotics, prebiotics, and vaccination. 

Interventions cost and thus, producers need incentives. Incentives include altruism, regulations, customer specifications, and litigation. A 2018 IAFP Round Table “RT9: Do Lawsuits Play a Productive Role in Advancing Food Safety?” suggested that customer specifications and regulations produced faster results; lawsuits were too far in the future. The COSTO and Walmart speakers said customer specifications are effective. Regulation has had some effect on E. coli O157:H7 in beef, but certainly not eliminated it in either commerce or preharvest.6 One can only speculate what the results would be if FSIS had not declared it an adulterant in 1994. We know more each year what the effect is of not declaring outbreak strains of Salmonella as adulterants.

The FSIS has the legal means to prevent these adulterants from entering commerce. The Meat and Poultry Inspection Acts 8-9 empower FSIS inspectors to conduct ante mortem and post mortem inspection of all animals before processing them into food. Traditionally, that has been visual inspection but not always. FSIS’s 2013 “Compliance Guide For Residue Prevention” uses laboratory results to compile a list, “The Residue Repeat Violator List.” It is composed of suppliers who have had more than one residue violation in the preceding 12 months. Thus, animals from a producer on that list present a “hazard reasonably likely to occur.” The HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point) rules require establishments to have controls to prevent any product with violative residues from entering commerce. Failure to do so is a violation of 9 CFR 417.6. FSIS can sample carcasses or live animals and the laboratory will report any violation to Field Operations for action. 

The principle used for residues could be applied to outbreak strains of certain bacterial pathogens also. These strains are adulterants as defined by both the Inspection Acts and the Code of Federal Regulations. FSIS routinely samples carcasses and products for pathogenic bacteria. When an outbreak strain is detected and traced back to an establishment, the establishment can identify the producer and that producer would be put on a “Adulterant Carrier List.” Future animals from that producer and their products must either be treated to inactivate any adulterants or tested (ICMSF Case 15) until the producer has implemented validated controls and verified their effectiveness to prevent future contamination. If the establishment cannot identify the producer, then all product from that establishment would be treated or tested under ICMSF Case 15 to prevent any adulterants from entering commerce.

This would be a harsh rule and FSIS would likely be sued by the industry. The outcome should be similar to Texas Food Industry Ass’n v. Espy7 where E. coli O157:H7 was found to be an adulterant in ground beef because consumers would eat the product rare. So why not Salmonella? The difference would be that FSIS could use the half century of scientific findings that cross contamination within consumer’s kitchens is a major source of foodborne illnesses, not just undercooking. Thus poultry and other meat products would be included.

The outcome of FSIS promulgating such a regulatory policy would be that preharvest control of pathogenic bacteria in food animal production would begin to be addressed. This action would begin to reduce the environmental contamination that reaches produce fields via waterways and even highways5.

Assays for pathogens have advanced rapidly in the past decade3. Methods are more rapid, sensitive, and specific. The FSIS, processors, and producers can use these methods to rapidly verify that interventions are working and adulterants are not being found in products.

It would be wonderful if altruism was the incentive for preventing adulterants from entering commerce. Alas, we do not live in that world. But let us take USC 602 to heart and apply it to preharvest control.

 References

1. Alegbeleye OO, Singleton I, Sant’Ana AS. 2018. Sources and contamination routes of microbial pathogens to fresh produce during field cultivation: A review. Food Microbiology. 73: 177-208. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2018.01.003

2. Berry ED, Wells JE, Bono JL, Woodbury BL, Kalchayanand N, Norman KN, Suslow TV, López-Velasco G, Millner PD. 2015. Effect of proximity to a cattle feedlot on Escherichia coli O157:H7 contamination of leafy greens and evaluation of the potential for airborne transmission. Appl Environ Microbiol 81:1101–1110. doi:10.1128/AEM.02998-14.

3. Besser, John M. 2018. Salmonella epidemiology: A whirlwind of change. Food Microbiology 71:55-59.

4. Heredia, Norma, Santos, García. 2018. Animals as sources of food-borne pathogens: A review. Animal Nutrition. In Press  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aninu.2018.04.006

5. Seedorf J, Schmidt RG.. 2017.  The simulated air flow pattern around a moving animal transport vehicle as the basis for a prospective biosecurity risk assessment. Heliyon 3:00358

6. Swaggerty, Christina L., Ester Grilli, Andrea Piva, Nicolae Corcionivoschi, Steven C. Ricke, Todd R. Callaway. 2018. The First 30 Years of Shiga Toxin–Producing Escherichia coli in Cattle Production: Preharvest Intervention Strategies.  Food and Feed Safety Systems and Analysis- Chapter 8. Pages 133–151 https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-811835-1.00008-7

7. Texas Food Industry Ass’n v. Espy, 870 F. Supp. 143 (W.D. Tex. 1994) US District Court for the Western District of Texas – 870 F. Supp. 143 (W.D. Tex. 1994) December 13, 1994

8. 21 U.S. Code § 455. Inspection in official establishments (Poultry Inspection)

9. 21 U.S. Code § 603 – Examination of animals prior to slaughter; use of humane methods (Meat Inspection)