Houston Chronicle Sunday

Salmonella sickens 35 after eating tainted eggs

Outbreak that affects 9 states traced to farm

- By Kristine Phillips

A salmonella outbreak that led to a recall of nearly 207 million eggs has now sickened nearly three dozen people in states along the East Coast.

Thirty-five people — up by 12 over the past few weeks — have been sickened by Salmonella braenderup, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said this week. The outbreak, which has been traced to a single egg producer, has resulted in 11 hospitaliz­ations. No deaths have been reported.

In April, Rose Acre Farms recalled its products after federal officials tied the illnesses to the company’s facility in North Carolina, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion said. The recalled eggs were sold under brand names such as Great Value, Country Daybreak and Crystal Farms. They were also sold to Waffle House restaurant­s and Food Lion stores.

An investigat­ion by federal officials led to an inspection of the farm’s facility in Hyde County, N.C., which produces 2.3 million eggs a day from 3 million hens.

Eggs produced at the farm are distribute­d to retail stores and restaurant­s in Colorado, Florida, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia, West Virginia and the Carolinas. Illnesses have been reported in all of the states, the majority of which were from New York and Virginia, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

Rose Acre Farms is a family-owned company headquarte­red in Seymour, Ind., and has 17 facilities in eight states. The Washington Post was unable to reach the company Saturday. In a statement to the Indianapol­is Star, chief operating officer Tony Wesner said: “We’re sorry for any concerns we may have caused consumers because some of our policies fell short of FDA standards, and we vow to do better in the future.”

Years ago, the company was involved in a nearly two-decade-long legal battle with the federal government. In 1990, three separate outbreaks that sickened about 450 people in three states were traced back to Rose Acre Farms. In response, the government prohibited the company from selling eggs from three Indiana farms where the contaminat­ed eggs originated and required expensive cleanups that threatened to put the company out of business.

Rose Acre Farms sued, and a few years later a federal judge ruled that the government had oversteppe­d its boundaries. A federal appeals court tossed out the judgment, ruling the regulation­s did not hurt the company’s bottom line.

After a few more years of back-and-forth appeals, the case was dismissed in 2009.

The recall is the largest since 2010, when a major salmonella outbreak tied to Iowa egg farms sickened more than 1,500 people, said Bill Marler, a Seattle-based personal injury attorney who focuses on food-borne illness litigation.

Salmonella can come from contaminat­ed animal products such as beef, poultry, milk and eggs, as well as fruits and vegetables. It can cause fever, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain among healthy people, but can lead to fatal infections among children younger than 5, adults older than 65 and those with weak immune systems.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States