April 11, 2006
HEALTH: Feds Issue Warning About E.coli Outbreak
By Lance Gay
Scripps Howard News Service
Washington, DC (SHNS) -- The federal government warned consumers Monday to
take precautions cooking meat after disease detectives concluded there is a
connection between 14 cases of illness caused by a dangerous strain of E.
coli that has been found in seven states across the country in the last six
months.
Amanda Eamich, spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food
Safety and Inspection Service, said scientific tests only recently connected
the illnesses to the same pathogen -- known by its scientific name E. coli
0157:H7 -- but the source of the pathogen has not yet been determined.
"As the science gets better and better, we are going to be seeing more of
this," Eamich said. She said there is no group pattern to outbreaks of the
disease that might have alerted the government earlier, and FSIS Monday
issued a public health alert urging consumers to adopt safe practices when
handling raw ground beef and other foods.
Those practices involve cooking meat to an internal temperature of 160
degrees Fahrenheit; proper washing of hands with warm, soapy water after
handling food; and washing fruits and vegetables with cold water before
using.
Eamich said scientists from the Centers for Disease Control, FSIS, and state
and local health departments have linked the 14 outbreaks in seven states
from September 2005 to last month to the E. coli pathogen. The states
involved were California, Iowa, New York, Ohio, Michigan, Rhode Island and
Wisconsin.
The CDC says E. coli 0157:H7 is a dangerous foodborne pathogen that causes
an estimated 73,000 cases of disease and 61 deaths each year, and can be
lethal for young children or people with compromised immune systems. The
pathogen was first identified in 1982, and outbreaks of illness have been
linked most commonly to eating undercooked hamburger. But infections also
have been linked to drinking raw milk, eating sprouts, or fruits and
vegetables washed in E. coli-contaminated water.






