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In a fatal rerun of the 2011 outbreak, two people have died and 141 have been sickened since July 7 after eating cantaloupes, the Wall Street Journal reports. But unlike last year's Listeria outbreak in cantaloupes, this year's deadly melons contain Salmonella, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Both deaths occurred in Kentucky, although the cantaloupes likely were grown in southwestern Indiana, the CDC said. The melons were distributed to 20 states, including California, where two illnesses have been reported.
This
"second deadly contamination outbreak in cantaloupes in less than a year is
putting pressure on the Obama administration to finalize a broad revision of
food-safety rules," the WSJ says. Twenty eight people died in last year's outbreak.
Pissed
off food-safety advocates say the outbreaks could have been prevented by the
Food Safety Modernization Act, which creates the first mandatory national safety
standards for produce and will require a greater number of federal inspections
at farms and other food-handling facilities. President Barack Obama signed the
act into law on Jan. 4, 2011, but slacker lawmakers have been dragging their
feet on writing rules to implement it.
The
suspected ground zero farm in Indiana associated with the current outbreak is
withdrawing its cantaloupes from the market and has agreed to cease distributing
cantaloupes for the rest of the growing season, the FDA said
Wal-Mart,
which sold last year's Listeria-laced cantaloupes, obtains cantaloupes from
southwestern Indiana for stores in several states, spokeswoman Dianna Gee told
the WSJ,
but the company has removed them from shelves. None of the cantaloupes Wal-Mart
was selling have been implicated in the outbreak, she added.
Consumers
shouldn't eat cantaloupes that were grown in southwestern Indiana, the CDC said.
The growing area is often identified with a sticker. But if it's not, "When in
doubt, throw it out," the agency advised.
There
is nothing inherently dirty about cantaloupes. Much of the contamination danger
lies in how the cantaloupes are handled during and after harvest, experts
say.
The
FDA has blamed last year's Listeria contamination of cantaloupes on contaminated
equipment and pools of tainted water on the floor of washing and packing
facility Jensen Farms, which, as we reported last week, is currently facing possible criminal
prosecutionfor the deadly outbreak.
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