Santa Fe New Mexican

Man dies in apparent botulism outbreak in Northern California

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A botulism outbreak linked to contaminat­ed nacho-cheese dip sold at a Northern California gas station has killed one man and left at least nine other people hospitaliz­ed, health officials said Monday.

The San Francisco County coroner’s office identified the dead man as Martin GalindoLar­ios Jr., 37.

Matt Conens, a spokesman for the California Department of Public Health, declined to release further informatio­n on the death, the current condition of the other victims, or the status and extent of the investigat­ion into the outbreak, discovered by early this month.

Family members of GalindoLar­ios did not immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment. An online fundraisin­g page said he was married and the father of two small children.

Tests confirmed the botulism toxin in nacho-cheese dip sold at a gas station in the Sacramento suburb of Walnut Grove, the state health agency said in a statement.

The agency said last week the container and cheese dip were removed May 5, and that authoritie­s believe the contaminat­ion posed no further risk to the public.

Conens declined to disclose whether the gas station involved was still open, and whether authoritie­s were examining if the contaminat­ion may have originated from the factory making the dip.

Botulism, a comparativ­ely rare kind of food poisoning, can lead to paralysis, breathing difficulty and sometimes death. Survivors often are forced to spend weeks or months on ventilator­s to help them breathe.

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