Recalls and Alerts: December 24, 2012

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.

United States

  • Allergy Alert: Stehouwer’s Frozen Foods (Grand Rapids, MI) recalls Stehouwer’s Pigs in the Blanket (12 x 18-oz pkgs per case; Produced Sept. 27, 2012, October 25, 2012 and Dec. 13, 2012; Use by date Sept 27, 2013, Oct. 25, 2013 and Dec 13, 2013) and Stehouwer’s Pigs in the Blanket “FOR INSTITUTIONAL USE ONLY” (5-lb bulk pkgs; Produced Oct 25, 2012; Use by date 102513), due to the presence of undeclared milk.
  • Allergy Alert: Wayne Farms (Decatur, AL) recalls GFS® Honey BBQ Flavored Chicken Wings (4 x 4-lb bags/case; Est P-33885; Case code 572160; Production date 11/28/12), due to the presence of undeclared egg. The recalled products were shipped to a foodservice distribution center in Kentucky for distribution at the retail level in Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee.
  • Outbreak Alert: The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment reports widespread gastrointestinal illness due to norovirus throughout Colorado, including in nursing homes, assisted living facilities, schools and child care centers.

Canada

  • Food Safety Recall: Charcuterie Transilvania (Laval, QC) recalls Saucisse ardelenesc (All products sold since December 12, 2012), because the product may be contaminated with Salmonella. The recalled product was sold only at Charcuterie Transilvania, 806 boulevard Curé-Labelle, Laval, QC.
  • Outbreak Alert: Maltese Grocery (Thunder Bay, ON) has shut down its catering operations temporarily after 85 people developed norovirus gastroenteritis as a result of eating food at three events catered by the company, according to a CBC report.
  • Outbreak Alert: CBC reports that health officials in southwestern Alberta are investigating an outbreak of more than 30 Salmonella infections, mostly in rural areas. Many of the infections are secondary – spread by household contact.

Europe

  • Allergy Alert (Netherlands): Unilever Benelux recalls Unox Beef Ragout (Bar code 8712566235735; Expiry date 15/09/17) because the cans may have been filled with goulash soup and thus contain undeclared mustard.

Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands

  • Food Safety Recall (Israel): Foodlee Sauces Food Products Ltd. recalls Soy Sauce (750g bottle; sell by date 10/19/2013), Sweet Soy Sauce (720g bottle; sell by date 10/19/2013) and Teriyaki Sauce (720g bottle; sell by date 10/19/2013), due to a failure on the fill lines that could affect product safety.
  • Outbreak Alert (Japan): The Japan Times reports that six patients have died of norovirus gastroenteritis during an outbreak at Shunkokaihigashi Hospital in Nichinan, Miyazaki Prefecture. In all, 44 patients and staff developed symptoms of gastroenteritis. Separately, 1,184 individuals at 372 companies based in Yamanashi developed food poisoning after they ate boxed lunches bought from the Runrun Lunch catering service.

Australia and New Zealand

  • Outbreak Alert (Australia): Health officials in several states are investigating an outbreak cluster of eight confirmed cases of Listeria monocytogenes that have been linked to consumption of Jindi and Wattle Valley brand brie and camembert cheeses. An additional three suspect cases may also be linked to the contaminated cheese. Illnesses have been reported in Queensland (1), Tasmania (1), Western Australia (1), Victoria (2) and New South Wales (3). Cheeses implicated in the illnesses were recalled on December 19, 2012.

Some supermarket chains post recall notices on their web sites for the convenience of customers. To see whether a recalled food was carried by your favorite supermarket, follow the live link to the supermarket’s recall web site.

*The Kroger umbrella encompasses numerous supermarket, marketplace and convenience store chains, listed on the Kroger corporate home page.
**Includes Safeway, Vons, Pavilions, Dominick’s, Genuardi’s, Randalls, Tom Thumb, Carrs and Pak N’ Save.

Recalls and Alerts: December 21, 2012

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.

United States

  • Food Safety Recall: S&M International Inc. (Bayonne, NJ) recalls Yang Sheng cooked salted duck eggs (6 eggs/12.69-oz vacuum-pkg; UPC 6949682803568; Lot code YS12-02C), because the product was not processed in a manner to prevent growth of Clostridium botulinum. The recalled eggs were distributed between August to October 2012 to stores and markets located in New York City area, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Michigan.
  • Food Safety Recall/Allergy Alert: Bi-Lo advises its customers that the manufacturer has recalled Vanilla Cake Roll with Strawberry Filling (8 oz; UPC 0-10374-49983; Item code 638796; Produced from 7/26/2012 through 10/27/2012), due to ingredient mislabelling.
  • Dietary Supplement Safety Recall: P&J Trading recalls Slimdia Revolution Dietary Supplement (30 capsules/bottle; All lots), because the product contains the prescription drug sibutramine, an appetite suppressant, which is not declared on the label. The recalled product was distributed nationwide in US from March 2012 to December 2012.
  • FDA Enforcement Action: FDA announces that a Federal judge has signed a consent decree imposing requirements on Sunland Inc. The consent decree requires that Sunland retain an independent sanitation expert to develop a sanitation control program that the company must then implement. The requirements also include compliance with the cGMP regulations. In addition, for the peanut butter plant, the company must conduct environmental monitoring and testing to ensure that disease-causing organisms are not present in the facility or in its finished foods and must have comprehensive inspections conducted by an independent sanitation expert. The consent decree permits Sunland to receive, hold, and distribute raw, unshelled peanuts from its storage buildings because the raw, unshelled peanuts are bound for processing facilities that include a “kill step” to eliminate Salmonella and other pathogenic bacteria. Peanut butter products manufactured by Sunland were linked to an outbreak of Salmonella Bredeney that sickened 42 people in 20 states.

Canada

Europe

Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands

  • Food Safety Alert (Hong Kong): The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) reminds the public not to consume puffer fish. The alert was released after CHP received a report of a suspected poisoning associated with consumption of this fish.

Some supermarket chains post recall notices on their web sites for the convenience of customers. To see whether a recalled food was carried by your favorite supermarket, follow the live link to the supermarket’s recall web site.

*The Kroger umbrella encompasses numerous supermarket, marketplace and convenience store chains, listed on the Kroger corporate home page.
**Includes Safeway, Vons, Pavilions, Dominick’s, Genuardi’s, Randalls, Tom Thumb, Carrs and Pak N’ Save.

Consumers – The New D.E.W. Line

Canadian and US readers of a ‘certain age’ will remember the NORAD Distant Early Warning Line that was a regular news item during the Cold War. The D.E.W. line consisted of a series of radar emplacements across the Canadian Arctic that were designed to give the military an early warning of incoming nuclear missiles from the Soviet Union.

Fortunately, the most serious threat that the D.E.W. line ever needed to deal with was Santa’s annual entry into North American air space every Christmas Eve.

The original D.E.W. line may be obsolete, but the concept has been borrowed by national and regional health officials in both Canada and the USA. The “threat” is contaminated food. The “radar screen” is composed of consumers.

All too often in recent years, the health and agriculture authorities that are supposed to protect the public from food-borne disease have failed to identify a hazard until most of the damage has been done.

  • In 2006/2007, Peter Pan Peanut Butter that was contaminated with Salmonella Tennessee caused 425 documented cases of salmonellosis. The earliest onset date was August 1, 2006. The first consumer warning was issued on February 14, 2007. By then, 288 cases of outbreak-related salmonellosis already had been confirmed.
  • In 2009, FDA found that pistachio nuts from Setton Pistachio of Terra Bella Inc. (California) were contaminated with several types of Salmonella. The agency collected this information “over several months” and informed CDC of the problem on March 26, 2009. Setton issued a recall notice on March 30, 2009. Fortunately, there was no measurable outbreak of illness – this time. Nevertheless, FDA apparently sat on these Salmonella-positive results for several months before advising CDC.
  • In early December 2009, CDC identified a “multistate cluster” of 14 E. coli O157:H7 illnesses with a single genetic fingerprint. Most of the illness onset dates occurred between mid-October and late November. The onset date of the last reported illness was December 14, 2009 – ten days before National Steak and Poultry recalled the remainder of 248,000 pounds of beef products that, finally, were implicated in the outbreak.
  • In 2008, the medical director of the Ontario (Canada) Public Health Laboratories blamed the lack of genetic typing capabilities for the delay in recognizing Canada’s lethal Listeria monocytogenes outbreak. It took three weeks, Low told CBC, for a connection to be made between two suspected listeriosis patients and the contaminated meat that they had eaten.
  • On September 4, 2012, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) and the US Food Safety and Inspection Service independently found E. coli O157:H7 in raw beef trimmings from XL Foods Inc. No public recall was announced until September 16th – nearly two weeks after the initial E. coli O157:H7-positive test results. On October 1st, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) finally notified Canadians that it had detected an outbreak of E. coli O157:H7. The onset date of the first confirmed case was September 9th; the 17th – and last – outbreak patient fell ill on October 15th.

On December 5, 2012, PHAC advised CFIA that it had identified a cluster of E. coli O157:H7 illnesses that might be linked to frozen burgers produced by Cardinal Meat Specialists Limited (Establishment 752). The onset date of the first illness was September 30th; that latest was November 22nd. It was only on December 7th that CFIA retrieved samples from the home of one of the five outbreak victims; collection of retail samples for testing began on December 8th. The first Health Hazard Alert/Recall Notice was issued on December 12th, after two retail samples were found to be contaminated. PHAC released its Public Health Notice to advise Canadians of the outbreak on December 17th.

CFIA is now investigating the ingredients used to produce the contaminated burgers. These include spices, domestic beef ingredients and imported beef ingredients (from Australia and New Zealand). The horses might have fled, but for damn sure, CFIA is going lock every door and window on the barn! Until the next time, that is.

I’m not suggesting that our food safety agencies are deliberately dilatory in their response to contamination. But we need to rethink our approach to prevention – and early detection – of foodborne disease. We need to apply the lessons from past failures, and take full advantage of the tools that are available. For example, Canada does not require provincial/territorial labs to post the genetic profiles of their E. coli cases on PulseNet Canada so that all labs across the country have access to this vital information. Yet, it was the absence of this very type of information that led, according to Dr. Low, to the delayed recognition of Canada’s deadly Listeria monocytogenes outbreak.

A couple of days ago, I contacted Dr. Richard Holley (University of Manitoba), one of Canada’s foremost food safety experts, for his perspective on this problem. He offered the following observation:

“We often hear public officials claim traceability is where resources/effort should be placed to protect us from foodborne illness (along with more inspection). In this outbreak “Officials acknowledged knowing about E. coli cases in Canada as early as October, but said they were not in a position to issue any recalls”. Greater emphasis on forensic clinical epidemiology would appear to be a more effective way to shorten exposure to contaminated food in the marketplace. If you look at the epidemiology curves of the two peanut butter outbreaks, the Mexican pepper, the DeCoster egg and German E. coli O104:H4 outbreaks, the outbreaks were almost over by the time the food causing each of these problems was identified and recalled. With the Cardinal Meats outbreak it has taken almost 3 months to identify garlic peppercorn hamburger as a vehicle.” 

We need to get better,” Dr. Holley added, “at shortening the time before a recall is made and being sure we recall the right food/ingredient.”

In other words, we need a better D.E.W. line.