Dayton Daily News

Salmonella outbreak traced to chick hatchery near Cincinnati

- By Mike Stobbe

ATLANTA —

A new salmonella outbreak that sickened nearly 100 people has been traced to mail-order chicks from the Cincinnati area, health officials said Thursday.

Since March, 93 cases of salmonella have been reported in 23 states, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. Eighteen people were hospitaliz­ed and one death is being investigat­ed to see if it was caused by the infection.

Investigat­ors interviewe­d dozens of the patients and most said they had touched chicks or ducklings before they got sick. Health officials advise washing your hands after handling live poultry.

The birds were traced to a mail-order hatchery in Mount Healthy, north of Cincinnati. The business, Mount Healthy Hatcheries, was tied to a salmonella outbreak last year as well.

State regulators visited the business repeatedly and say it has done what the state asked.

“The place is very clean,” said Erica Pitchford, a spokeswoma­n for the Ohio Department of Agricultur­e.

It’s possible salmonella may have come from other businesses that supply chickens to the hatchery, she said.

The latest outbreak is different from one reported Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

That one involved more than 300 cases of a different salmonella strain over eight years, and was traced to a hatchery in New Mexico.

The ability of officials to identify and trace outbreaks is improving.

But there may also be a real increase in salmonella cases from chicks that’s driven by the increasing popularity of backyard flocks, said Casey Barton Behravesh, a CDC veterinary epidemiolo­gist.

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