Story Published:
Jul 29, 2002 at 12:20 PM PDT
Story Updated:
Jul 24, 2009 at 11:04 AM PDT
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Contaminated lettuce apparently caused an E. coli outbreak that sickened at least 29 people in Washington state, federal health officials said Monday in warning consumers nationwide to avoid romaine lettuce made by Spokane Produce.
The problem: The lettuce was sold under several different brand
names, and the Food and Drug Administration doesn't have a complete
list and isn't sure if other states received shipments, said FDA
acting commissioner Lester Crawford.
The FDA urged all consumers to throw away 5-pound bags of
"Romaine Toss" sold by Spokane Produce, and to ask grocery store
produce managers if smaller packages of romaine came from that
company.
The unusual consumer warning followed an episode at a Washington
cheerleading camp in which 29 people became sick with E. coli,
including a teenager whose kidneys were so damaged that she is on
dialysis, the FDA said.
Doctors are investigating another 16 people who didn't attend
the camp but also are suspected of having E. coli linked to the
lettuce, Crawford said.
A week ago, 19 million pounds of ConAgra hamburger were recalled
because of E. coli contamination blamed for sickening at least 20
people, mostly in Colorado.
E. coli is a bacterium often found in the intestinal tracts and
feces of livestock. In people, it can cause bloody diarrhea,
abdominal cramps and sometimes death. Most at risk are the very
young, the elderly and people with weak immune systems.
Most illnesses caused by E. coli stem from eating undercooked
ground beef, but manure or feces-contaminated irrigation water
sometimes taints fresh produce, too.
FDA's Crawford said the Spokane Produce romaine clearly is
linked to the cheerleading camp outbreak. But he said no formal
recall has been issued because of problems identifying how and
where the lettuce was sold, and the last known illness occurred on
July 19, which suggests most of the suspect lettuce may no longer
be on store shelves. Lettuce has a two-week shelf life.
Still, the FDA issued Monday's warning as a precaution in case
the lettuce remains in consumers' refrigerators.
A woman answering the phone Monday at Spokane Produce refused
comment.
For More Information:
FDA release -- www.fda.gov
Spokane Produce -- www.spokaneproduce.com