The E. coli outbreak that sickened at least 41 people on Michigan and Ohio
has spawned cases in three other states, US health officials announced on
Tuesday.
The outbreak made the Kroger Food Store, the US’s
largest grocery chain, voluntarily recall all ground beef products that were
sold between May 21 and June 8 at its stores. The same outbreak prompted Nebraska
Beef Ltd.'s recall of 5.3 million pounds of beef.
The other three states where E. coli has been spotted are New York, Kentucky and Indiana. Laboratory
tests confirmed the same strain of E. coli, 0157:H7, which was blamed for
sickening people in Michigan and Ohio, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
If the Kentucky patient lives
near Ohio, the New York
and Indiana patients did not travel to either
of the states where the outbreak began, which means E. coli was not being
brought by people travelling from Ohio or Michigan to these states, Mark Sotir,
a CDC investigator working on the outbreak, said, according to the Associated
Press.
There are currently 44 cases of E. coli illnesses. The
outbreak started between May 30 and June 24. The CDC says 21 of the infected
people needed hospitalization and one developed kidney failure. No deaths have
been reported so far due to E. coli.
E.
coli is a potentially deadly bacterium that can cause diarrhea, stomach cramps,
vomiting and in most severe cases kidney failure. Most of the infected persons
get well in 15 days. People predisposed to the infection include children,
seniors, and persons whose immune system is weakened.
The
CDC estimates that there may be about 70,000 infections with E. coli annually
in the United States,
with many of these cases not seeking medical care.
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