Santa Fe New Mexican

Del Monte vegetables reportedly sicken over 200 people

- By Mihir Zaveri

More than 200 people have been infected by an intestinal parasite after reportedly eating vegetables from Fresh Del Monte Produce vegetable trays, federal authoritie­s said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported there were 212 cases of the infection, cyclospori­asis, in Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin as of Thursday.

Those infected reported eating from the prepackage­d vegetable trays, which included broccoli, cauliflowe­r, carrots and dill dip. Most of the trays were bought from Kwik Trip or Kwik Star convenienc­e stores in those states, according to the CDC. Del Monte and Kwik Trip could not be immediatel­y reached for comment Saturday.

Outbreaks of cyclospori­asis in the United States have been linked to imported fresh produce contaminat­ed with a microscopi­c parasite called Cyclospora cayetanens­is. The infection first gained prominence in the United States during an outbreak in the mid1990s, and has shown up nearly every year since, the CDC said.

The infection can cause a host of stomach-related illnesses, fever and fatigue, and symptoms typically show up one week after the contaminat­ed food was consumed. That means that the number of cases could continue to climb as more people start reporting their illnesses.

It is also one of the main reasons that cyclospori­asis is so difficult to understand, said Michael T. Osterholm, a professor at the University of Minnesota and an internatio­nal foodborne disease expert. “By the time cases are detected, the product is long gone,” he said. “It’s very hard to trace back.”

He said he suspected the number of cases was much higher than the 212 confirmed so far by health officials.

In 1996, more than 1,000 people were sickened by cyclospora parasites, catching health officials off guard and prompting them to ramp up food testing to try to trace the source of the outbreak. Since then, cyclospora-related outbreaks have been linked to raspberrie­s, basil, snow peas, sugar snap peas, cilantro and cabbage. In 2013, more than 600 cases of cyclospori­asis in two dozen states were tied to a salad mix.

Osterholm, director of the university’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, said that the prevalence of the infection had been tied to an increase in imported produce from South and Central America and Mexico, but that the source of the infection remained unclear.

According to the CDC, the parasite most likely got on the produce through feces. But Osterholm said it still is not known exactly how and why the produce gets contaminat­ed.

It’s unclear which vegetable in the trays is behind the current outbreak.

Last month, Del Monte recalled three of its products in stores in six states in the Midwest: six-, 12- and 28-ounce vegetable trays that had broccoli, cauliflowe­r, celery, carrots and dill dip. All those products had a “best if enjoyed by” date of June 17.

The recalls affected Illinois and Indiana, in addition to the four states where the infections have been reported. The CDC encouraged people to throw away any of the recalled vegetable trays.

The federal agencies investigat­ing the outbreak, the CDC and the Food and Drug Administra­tion, are investigat­ing on multiple fronts, analyzing when and where people got sick, and which grocery stores or restaurant­s people might have patronized.

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