Las Vegas Review-Journal

Health officials can’t identify source of E. coli in Costco chicken salad

- By JoNel Aleccia

SEATTLE — Federal food safety officials haven’t nabbed a culprit after all in an E. coli outbreak tied to Costco chicken salad that sickened 19 and led to the recall of 155,000 food products last month.

Officials with the Food and Drug Administra­tion said Tuesday that tests failed to identify E. coli O157:H7 from a sample of celery and onions from Taylor Farms Pacific Inc., of Tracy, Calif.

“The ongoing investigat­ion has not revealed a specific ingredient responsibl­e for the illnesses,” the FDA wrote in a statement.

The celery-onion mixture was identified as the potential source of contaminat­ion in Costco rotisserie chicken salad that was linked to 19 illnesses in seven states as of Nov. 23.

That was based on five preliminar­y tests by the Montana Department of Health, which indicated the presence of the bug in chicken salad samples from a Montana Costco. In response, Taylor Farms voluntaril­y recalled multiple products that contained the celery mix on Nov. 26, followed by an expanded recall a week later.

Costco pulled the chicken salad from store shelves on Nov. 20 and stopped production.

Still, that doesn’t mean the bug wasn’t in the samples, only that later tests couldn’t find it, the FDA noted. The samples were analyzed with a rapid test to screen for bacteria. But later analysis may have failed to find the germ because other bacteria could have grown, too; there were too few of the bacteria in question to detect; they may have been hard to isolate; or they could have died off over time.

“This does not let celery off the hook,” said Craig Wilson, Costco’s vice president of food safety and quality assurance.

The salad was composed of chicken, high-acid salad dressing and the celery/ onion mix. Only the vegetables have been known to be associated with E. coli outbreaks, Wilson noted.

All the products in question were perishable and are no longer available for consumptio­n.

The Shiga toxin-producing E. coli were linked to six illnesses in Montana, five in Utah, four in Colorado and one each in California, Missouri, Virginia and Washington.

 ?? REUTERS FILE PHOTO ?? A Costco shopping cart is shown Sept. 11, 2013, at a Costco Wholesale store in Carlsbad, Calif.
REUTERS FILE PHOTO A Costco shopping cart is shown Sept. 11, 2013, at a Costco Wholesale store in Carlsbad, Calif.

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