Recalls and Alerts: April 12-13, 2022

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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.

If you would like to receive automatic email alerts for all new articles posted on eFoodAlert, please submit your request using the sidebar link.

Interested in learning more about food safety and the history of foodborne disease outbreaks and investigations? Click on the TAINTED menu at the top of the page to read or listen to a short excerpt, then follow the buy links to add a digital, print or audio copy to your personal library.

Listen to an excerpt of the new audiobook edition right here

Chapter 6. Birth of a Pathogen

International recall of Ferrero’s Kinder chocolate products

Ferrero has expanded its international recall of Kinder Surprise chocolate novelty products, linked to a multi-country outbreak of Salmonella Typhimurium illnesses. Click on the country link to navigate to the most recent recall notice for that jurisdiction.

United States

OUTBREAK INVESTIGATION UPDATES: FDA is investigating a new outbreak of 15 cases of Listeria monocytogenes that have not yet been linked to any food product. In addition, the number of Adverse Events in a separate investigation has grown to 38, and the agency is in the process of collecting and analyzing samples.

Allergy Alert: Snak King recalls O Organics Sea Salt Organic Popcorn (5 oz; Best if used by 9/24/2022 and 9/25/2022; UPC 079893 403038) due to undeclared milk.

FDA Warning Letter: During a September 2021 inspection of TreeHouse Foods, Inc. (Cambridge, MD) FDA found “…serious deviations from the Emergency Permit Control regulation…and the Thermally Processed Low-Acid Foods Packaged in Hermetically Sealed Containers regulation“. The company’s response to the FDA’s observations was deemed to be inadequate, resulting in an official Warning Letter.

FDA Warning Letter: During a September/October 2021 inspection of Northeast Seafood Products, Inc. (Denver, CO) initiated as part of a multistate foodborne Salmonella Thompson outbreak investigation, FDA found the presence of the outbreak strain in the production facility in addition to “…serious violations of the Seafood Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) regulation … and the Current Good Manufacturing Practice, Hazard Analysis and Risk-Based Preventive Controls for Human Food regulation.” After a review of documentation of corrective actions taken by the firm, the FDA expressed its continued “serious concerns” in an official Warning Letter.

Canada

Allergy Alert: Sunrise Meat & Sausage Ltd. recalls three flavours of Sunrise Meat & Sausage Ltd. brand Smokies due to undeclared mustard and soy. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Allergy Alert: Fresh Market Foods recalls Fresh Market Foods brand Beef Steak Nuggets (300-500g; All batch codes where anchovy not declared; UPC starts with 0 203091) and Fresh Market Foods brand “Pemeal” Back Bacon Chunks (300-500g; All batch codes where anchovy not declared; UPC starts with 0 203093) due to undeclared anchovy.

Food Safety Recall: Puresource Natural Products recalls Inari brand Organic Blue Poppy Seeds (250g; Lots 3142573, 3182851, 3227118; Expiry dates 01/23, 10/23, 10/24, respectively; UPC 6 67390 35001 8) due to possible Salmonella contamination.

Food Safety Recall: Intercity Packers Ltd. recalls Intercity Packers Ltd. brand Oyster N/Shell Royal Miyagi Ow (Harvest location BC Area 15-4/LF#: 0195337; Harvest dates 03/29/22 & 04/04/22; Process dates 03/30/22 & 04/06/22, respectively) due to possible Norovirus contamination.

Europe

Allergy Alert (Belgium): Albert Heijn  recalls AH Krenten-rozijnenbrood / Currant-raisin bread (5 slices; Best before 16/04/2022) due to undeclared nuts, barley, oats and rye.

Food Safety Recall (France): Société Nouvelle des Etablissements Jean Mazière recalls Jean Maziere brand Pâté croûte Richelieu / Pâté in a crust (Lot 09522PCR; Use by 10/05/2022) due to foreign matter contamination (small pieces of plastic).

Food Safety Recall (France): ONETIK recalls Onetik brand Bleu de brebis / Sheep’s milk cheese (Lot 059; Best before 03/06/2022) due to foreign matter contamination (metal).

Food Safety Recall (France): ETABLISSEMENTS BOURGAIN ET FILS recalls BOURGAIN ET FILS brand Filets de haddock fumés sous vide skin / Smoked filet of haddock, vacuum-packed with skin (200g; Lot 133135; Use by 23/04/2022) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): FROMAGERIE PIERRE JACQUIN ET FILS recalls COURTHIAL brand Selles sur cher AOP Fermier / Goat cheese (Lot J20920013; Best before 09/05/2022) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): ALIMENTATION GROS IMPORT DIFFUS RHONE-A EPICERIE  recalls BEDROS brand CLOUS DE GIROFLE / Cloves (32g; Lot 22030027; Best before 30/09/2023) due to foreign matter contamination (glass).

Food Safety Recall (France): ANDRE LOUSSOUARN recalls ANDRE LOUSSOUARN brand COQUILLES SAINT-JACQUES AUX PETITS LEGUMES / Scallops with vegetables (2-pack; Lot 22144; Use by 23/04/2022) due to possible Salmonella contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): ANDRE LOUSSOUARN recalls ANDRE LOUSSOUARN brand CROUSTILLANT DE SAINT-JACQUES AUX PETITS LEGUMES / Crispy scallops with vegetables (2-pack and 6-pack; Lot 22144; Use by 23/04/2022 & 24/04/2022) due to possible Salmonella contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): SCEA DE LA BOISETTE FERME DE LA BOISETTE / FERME DU MONT ST CYR recalls multiple types of raw milk due to possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination. Please refer to the recall notices at Rappel Conso for details on the affected products.

Food Safety Recall (France): SALAISONS DES BELIERS recalls SALAISONS DES BELIERS brand Pâté aux endives (3.2 kg; Lot 220404000; Use by 15/05/2022) due to possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): AUCHAN recalls Gateaux fabriqués et vendus en magasin / Cakes made and sold in the store (multiple varieties) because the cakes are decorated with Kinder chocolate products and may be contaminated with Salmonella. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Food Safety Recall (France): ALIMENTATION GROS IMPORT DIFFUS RHONE-A EPICERIE recalls B&S CUISINE brand PISTACHE DECORTIQUEE / Shelled pistachios (250g & 100g; Lots 735 & 22010030; Best before 31/08/2023 & 31/01/2023, respectively) due to elevated aflatoxin level.

Food Safety Recall (France): ALIMENTATION GROS IMPORT DIFFUS RHONE-A EPICERIE recalls PISTACHE DECORTIQUEE / Shelled pistachios (10 kg & 200g; Lot 735; Best before 31/08/2023) due to elevated aflatoxin level.

Food Safety Recall (France): ALIMENTATION GROS IMPORT DIFFUS RHONE-A EPICERIE recalls MELANGE MANHATTAN / Mixed nuts (1 kg; Lot 21120056; Best before 30/11/2022) due to elevated aflatoxin level.

Food Safety Recall (Germany): Firma Fromagerie Jacquin recalls Selles sur Cher goat cheese (Lots J20910026, J20910028, J20910153; Best before 09.05.2022, 14.05.2022, 21.05.2022, respectively) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Germany): Jentschura International GmbH recalls WurzelKraft Pflanzliches Feingranulat zum Verzehr mit Früchten, Blütenpollen, Kräutern und Gemüsen / Fine granules with fruit, pollen, herbs and vegetables (600g; Lot L220124; Expiry date 01/2023) due to Salmonella contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Netherlands): DekaMarkt and Dirk recall Speklap à la minute gemarineerd / Marinated minute steaks wrapped in bacon (4 pieces; All Expiry dates up to and including 16-04-2022) due to possible Salmonella contamination.

Food Safety Recall (Scotland): Baxters Food Group Ltd recalls Fray Bentos Just Chicken Pie (425g; Batch code L079T; Best before end September 2023) due to possible foreign matter contamination (small pieces of plastic).

Pet Food Safety Recall (Belgium): Grizo recalls Garden Heroes brand Nourriture pour oiseaux de jardin Pinda’s/Arachides décortiquées – Pinda’s Garden bird food/shelled peanuts (5kg & 20kg; Lot ad 3-12-21; Best before 03/06/2023) due to presence of elevated aflatoxin B1 level.

Australia and New Zealand

Food Safety Recall (Australia): Coles Supermarkets Pty Ltd recalls Coles Baby Spinach (60g, 120g and 280g; Use by 13 APR 22 (60g) and 13 APR 22 & 14 APR 22 (120g & 280g)) due to possible Salmonella contamination.

Recalls and Alerts: April 9-11, 2022

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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.

If you would like to receive automatic email alerts for all new articles posted on eFoodAlert, please submit your request using the sidebar link.

Interested in learning more about food safety and the history of foodborne disease outbreaks and investigations? Click on the TAINTED menu at the top of the page to read or listen to a short excerpt, then follow the buy links to add a digital, print or audio copy to your personal library.

Listen to an excerpt of the new audiobook edition right here

Chapter 6. Birth of a Pathogen

International recall of Ferrero’s Kinder chocolate products

Ferrero has expanded its international recall of Kinder Surprise chocolate novelty products, linked to a multi-country outbreak of Salmonella Typhimurium illnesses. Click on the country link to navigate to the most recent recall notice for that jurisdiction.

Canada

Food Safety Recall: Global Reach Confections & More Inc. recalls Verstegen brand “Mix Voor Nasi & Bami Goreng” (30g; Batch code 1005943233; Expiry date 31-12-2024) due to Salmonella contamination.

Europe

OUTBREAK INVESTIGATION (UK): The UK Health Security Agency is investigating a higher than usual number of cases of hepatitis in children in England. There are approximately 60 cases under investigation in children under 10 years of age. A similar investigation is underway in Scotland. In the cases under investigation the common viruses that cause hepatitis have not been detected.

Allergy Alert (Italy): Centro Latte Bressanone Soc. Agr. Coop. recalls Mozzarella Vivibene Selex Bocconcini “senza lattosio” / Lactose-free mozzarella (125g; Lots 94, 95 (03.05) – 96, 97 (05.05); Best before 03.05 and 05.05) due to undeclared lactose.

Allergy Alert (Netherlands): Albert Heijn recalls AH Krenten rozijnbrood / Currant raisin bread (5 slices/pkg; Best before April 16, 2022) due to undeclared nuts, barley, oats and rye.

Food Safety Recall (Belgium): Smartmat NV recalls Foodbag One Meal Box Plat de riz avec bœuf mariné et poivron / rice dish with marinated beef and bell pepper (Use by 10/04/2022 and 11/04/2022) and Lanières de bœuf marinées à la thaïlandaise / Thai-style marinated beef strips (Lots  220404 and 220405; Use by 11/04/2022 and 12/04/2022) due to Salmonella contamination.

Food Safety Recall (France): SA FROMAGERIE PIERRE JACQUIN ET FILS recalls JACQUIN brand Selles sur cher AOP Fermier cheese (Multiple lot codes and Best before dates) due to Listeria monocytogenes contamination. Please refer to the recall notice for a complete list of affected products.

Food Safety Recall (Ireland): Tesco recalls Tesco Free From Digestive Biscuits (160g; Best before end March 2023) due to possible foreign matter contamination (small pieces of metal).

Food Safety Recall (UK): Tesco recalls Tesco Free From Digestive Biscuits (160g; Best before end March 2023) due to possible foreign matter contamination (small pieces of metal).

Abbott Nutrition: What price profits?

In the calendar year 2021, Abbott Laboratories, the parent company of Abbott Nutrition, spent almost $2.3 BILLION to repurchase shares of its stock.

This was in addition to $403 million spent for the same purpose in 2020, $718 million in 2019, and $238 million in 2018.

In 2020, Abbott Laboratories’ net profits were in excess of $7 BILLION, an increase of more than 57% over the net profits of the year before.

Between September 2019 and January 2022, while the corporation’s profits soared and Abbott Laboratories plowed billions of dollars into a stock buy-back program, maintenance and quality control issues at Abbott Nutrition’s Sturgis plant snowballed.

Early warnings

The early warning signals were evident during the FDA’s 2019 annual inspection of the company’s manufacturing facility, as documented in the Establishment Inspection Report, obtained by eFoodAlert in response to a Freedom of Information Act request.

Between September 2018 and September 2019, both the FDA and the company received several complaints of illnesses among babies who had been fed a Similac infant formula product. These included:

  • A report from a Pediatric Nurse Practitioner that five babies under the practitioner’s care had suffered from projectile vomiting after consuming Similac Sensitive Infant Formula (multiple batch codes).
  • An infant diagnosed with Enterobacter (Cronobacter) sakazakii after consuming three different infant formula products, two of which were Similac products. The infant was treated with antibiotics and recovering.
  • A baby was infected with Salmonella after consuming a specific batch code Similac Total Comfort infant formula.
  • An infant consumed Similac Sensitive infant formula and developed high temperature and vomiting. The infant was diagnosed with Salmonella.
  • A male baby tested positive for Salmonella after consuming a batch of Similac Sensitive infant formula.
  • A baby possibly infected with Salmonella after having been fed two different batches of Similac Sensitive.
  • A baby being fed Similac Advance formula died. The cause of death was unknown

The company responded to all of these complaints by conducting reviews of its records for similar complaints (none found), reviewing batch records, and the results of microbiological tests conducted at the time of manufacture.

In some cases, the company conducted microbiological tests of retained samples from the indicated batches, with uniformly negative results.

In response to the Cronobacter complaint, Abbott also carried out microbiological testing on the consumer’s opened product, with negative results.

In addition to the consumer complaints, the company’s own lab found Cronobacter in a sample of Alimentum Advance Powder on August 5, 2019, during the course of routine finished-product testing activities.

In response, Abbott quarantined the Cronobacter-positive batch, in addition to the batches produced immediately before and after the contaminated batch.

After investigating the source of the contamination, the firm identified the root cause as being “…due to a non-routine intervention.”

According to the company’s records, the firm identified and implemented corrective actions, and designated the contaminated batch for destruction.

Environmental monitoring results from after the “non-routine intervention” showed two fails followed by two pass results (ie., Cronobacter-negative) on follow-up.

The 2019 FDA inspection

The FDA’s 2018 inspection resulted in the Sturgis facility receiving a clean bill of health. In fact, all of the prior inspections of this location from 2011 through 2018 were without adverse observations, according to the FDA inspection database.

The 2019 Establishment Inspection Report (EIR) describes the FDA visit as a “comprehensive surveillance inspection” which was conducted as part of the Infant Formula Program and Medical Foods Program.

However, even with the history of complaints, the agency conducted only a superficial lab investigation. FDA inspectors obtained samples of two finished products to conduct nutrient analysis and microbiological tests.

Both finished products yielded negative test results for both Cronobacter and Salmonella.

Despite Abbott’s acknowledgment of having found Cronobacter in a finished product and in the environment, the inspection did not included any raw material, in-process, or environmental sampling.

The visual inspection observations included in the EIR indicate a production plant that appeared to be in good repair, with proper attention given to maintenance and sanitation.

There was no evidence of insect or rodent infestation, and no birds flying through the production or warehouse areas.

The inspectors reviewed the company’s maintenance records, and noted repairs to small cracks and pitted areas along the production lines and on the exterior and inside of dryers.

The only significant negative observation was an error in sampling finished product for microbiological testing. A technician was seen to draw only 30 samples from a production lot instead of the 60 samples required under the sampling plan.

The two-year gap

Whether due to the Covid-19 pandemic or to some other reason, there was no annual inspection of Abbott Nutrition’s Sturgis location in 2020.

When the FDA inspectors returned to Sturgis in September 2021, they found a very different situation. At the completion of their five-day inspection, they issued a formal list of Inspectional Observations (FDA Form 483).

  • Standing water in multiple locations
  • Processing operator not sanitizing or changing gloves after touching non-food contact surfaces, before going on to touch food contact surfaces
  • Lack of calibration of flow meters, pressure sensors and a flow sensor on the product line
  • Inadequate frequency of temperature monitoring for a pasteurizer, even though temperature was identified as a Critical Control Point for the product in question.

The Form 483 leaves multiple questions unanswered:

  • What consumer complaints were lodged with either the FDA or the company during the two years between inspections?
  • Did the FDA conduct environmental, raw material, or finished product testing as part of this inspection?
  • What other observations were noted during the inspection that did not rise to the level of a formal “Inspectional Observation?”
  • Were the inspectors aware at the time they were on location that the FDA had received a Cronobacter sakazakii illness report linked to an Abbott Nutriton product?

Answers to at least some of these questions should be contained in the full Establishment Inspection Report. eFoodAlert has requested, but has not yet received, a copy of the full report.

Even in the absence of the full report of the September 2021 inspection, it is clear from the contents of the Form 483 issued at the completion of the January-March 2022 inspection that conditions in the Sturgis plant had deteriorated significantly since 2019.

  • Environmental samples collected near the start of the FDA inspection revealed the presence of Cronobacter sakazakii in multiple locations. Whole genome sequencing determined that five different strains of the pathogen were present in the plant environment.
  • Between the end of the September 2019 inspection and February 20, 2022, Abbott’s own testing activities documented at least eight instances of Cronobacter contamination in the environment and two instances of Cronobacter in finished products.
  • A review of Work Orders revealed multiple instances of water leaks, including one location that was the source of three separate leaks over the course of a year.
  • A total of 310 “water events” documented by the company between January 1, 2020 and February 1, 2022, including water leaks, moisture and condensation in dry powdered infant formula production areas. These events were not associated with routine clean-in-place equipment cycles.
  • A history of internal deterioration of dryers dating back to September 2018, including multiple instances of pits and cracks inside the main chambers of at least two dryers.
  • Inadequate follow-up of consumer complaints received by FDA beginning in September 2021 regarding Cronobacter sakazakii and Salmonella illnesses potentially associated with three different Similac dry infant formula products.

How was this allowed to happen?

Both Abbott Nutrition and the FDA have a lot to answer for.

Ever since a baby died from a Cronobacter sakazakii infection in Tennessee in 2001, the FDA has repeatedly claimed that ensuring the safety of infant formulas was a high priority for the agency.

Yet, the agency allowed two years to elapse between inspections of Abbott Nutrition’s more than sixty-year-old production facility in Sturgis, Michigan.

This lapse, however, does not excuse Abbott’s lack of care.

Food manufacturers–especially those that serve vulnerable populations such as infants–are legally, morally, and ethically bound to ensure the safety of all of their products.

There is no excuse for Abbott’s having abrogated its responsibilities to its customers. Certainly, the company cannot plead poverty as a reason for having neglected to properly maintain its production equipment and manufacturing environment.


Learn more about Cronobacter sakazakii and other foodborne disease outbreaks in TAINTED. From Farm Gate to Dinner Plate, Fifty Years of Food Safety Failures, now available in digital, print and audiobook editions.

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“Reads like a true crime novel” – Food Safety News