Tuesday, December 05, 2006

UPDATE Commonality Found in Taco Bell Outbreak


from My Way News

All 11 Taco Bells implicated in an E. coli outbreak in New York and New Jersey used the same food distributor, the restaurant chain said Tuesday as health officials tried to pinpoint the source of the dangerous bacteria that sickened at least three dozen people. Nine people remained hospitalized in New Jersey and New York, including an 11-year-old boy in stable condition with kidney damage. Taco Bell Corp. said it had sanitized its nine closed restaurants and planned to reopen them on Tuesday.

The distributor, Texas-based McLane Co., said that Taco Bell representatives and state and federal health inspectors toured the distribution center in Burlington, N.J., that supplied the eight Long Island, N.Y., restaurants and the three in New Jersey. Taco Bell ships its beef-and-bean fillings to restaurants pre-cooked and pre-seasoned to save money, and industry experts said that practice may be safer, because the food is handled by fewer people and is heated twice - once at the plant and once at the individual restaurants.

New Jersey health officials said their investigation would probably focus on produce, not just meat, because some of the 23 people who ate at New Jersey Taco Bells and were infected with E. coli were vegetarians. E. coli is found in the feces of humans and livestock. Most E. coli infections are associated with undercooked meat. The bacteria also can be found on sprouts or leafy vegetables such as spinach. The bacteria also can be passed from person to person if they do not thoroughly wash their hands after using the bathroom. New Jersey's health commissioner has said that the most recent case of E. coli was reported on Nov. 29, so the danger of infection may have passed. Two of the 11 restaurants implicated - both in New Jersey - were inspected and remained open.
E. coli is a common and ordinarily harmless bacteria, but certain strains can cause abdominal cramps, fever, bloody diarrhea, kidney failure, blindness, paralysis, even death. Earlier this year, three people died and more than 200 fell ill from an outbreak that was traced to packaged spinach grown in California.

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