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  • 31
    May
    2012
    12:31pm, EDT

    Second mail-order hatchery tied to salmonella outbreak

    By JoNel Aleccia, Senior Writer, NBC News

    Live chicks and ducklings from a mail-order hatchery in Ohio are being blamed for a salmonella outbreak that has sickened 93 people in 23 states -- including one possible death.

    This is the second time in a year that the Mount Healthy Hatchery near Cincinnati has been implicated in outbreaks of multiple strains of salmonella from live poultry.

    At least 18 people have been hospitalized in connection with the latest outbreak, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than a third of victims are children younger than 10.

    Government health officials posted the report late Wednesday, the same day that CDC researchers published a summary of an eight-year outbreak of salmonella Montevideo tied to young poultry from a West Coast hatchery. At least 316 people were sickened between 2004 and 2011, said CDC officials, who declined to identify the hatchery.

    The latest outbreak detected infections caused by strains of salmonella Infantis, salmonella Newport and salmonella Lille. The MountHealthy Hatchery was implicated in an 2011 outbreak of salmonella Altona and salmonella Johannesburg infections. State agriculture officials inspected the site last year and made recommendations for improvements.

    CDC officials did not indicate which state was investigating a possible death tied to the new outbreak, which includes infections reported between March 1 and May 19.  Sick people range in age from less than 1 to 100 years and 37 percent of victims are age 10 or younger.

    There have been some three dozen salmonella outbreaks tied to mail-order poultry since 1990, said Casey Barton Behravesh, a veterinarian and researcher with the CDC. The young poultry are sold at agricultural feed stores or shipped directly to consumers by mail. 

    Live poultry can carry and shed salmonella even when they appear healthy and they can transmit the virus to humans after contact with the birds, their feed or their environment.

    Children, the elderly and people with compromised immune systems are particularly susceptible to salmonella infections, but even healthy people can become seriously ill.

    Health officials urge consumers to be vigilant about thorough hand-washing after handling poultry and about avoiding potential contamination.

    It's up to agriculture officials to work with industry to insure the safety of the birds, said Tony Forshey, the Ohio state veterinarian who has inspected and advised the Mount Healthy Hatchery throughout the recent outbreaks. But consumers also need to realize that live chicks and ducklings are livestock, not pets.

    "The industry has a responsibility," he said. "But, to me, the public has a responsibility to be educated as well."

    Related stories on Vitals:  

    • Salmonella by mail? Hatchery sparks 8-year outbreak
    • Nearly 1,000 dogs now sick from chicken jerky treats, FDA reports show
    • Testing for new E. coli strains in beef about to begin
    • VIDEO: Mama duck steps in traffic to save ducklings

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  • 30
    May
    2012
    5:06pm, EDT

    Salmonella by mail? Hatchery sparks 8-year outbreak

    Joseph Eid / AFP - Getty Images file

    Brightly dyed chicks sold as Easter gifts are part of the problem that sparked an eight-year outbreak of salmonella Montevideo infections that sickened 316 people in 43 states, mostly young children, according to CDC researchers.

    By JoNel Aleccia, Senior Writer, NBC News

    It took eight years and multiple tests, trace-backs and interviews with sick owners of fuzzy chicks, but federal health officials say they’ve finally clamped down on an outbreak of salmonella infections traced to live, mail-order poultry.

    Between 2004 and 2011, at least 316 people in 43 states were sickened by a strain of salmonella Montevideo that had stumped staff at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An estimated 5,000 additional cases likely went unreported, officials say.

    Only through careful analysis of the genetic fingerprint of the bug and cooperation with human and animal health officials and poultry experts did the CDC crew link the cases to “Hatchery C,” a supplier of 4 million birds a year identified only as being in the western U.S.

    “It was definitely an interesting outbreak,” said Casey Barton Behravesh, one of a team of CDC researchers who reported on their investigation in the latest issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

    Because the hatchery was cooperative and because the threat of this particular infection appears to be over -- with only one case of the outbreak strain reported so far this year -- CDC officials declined to name the source of live young poultry popular as Easter presents or with urban backyard chicken farmers.

    “The problem seems to be under control,” said Behravesh, a veterinarian who is part of the CDC's National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases.

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    But she warned that the larger issue of salmonella sickness sparked by mail-order shipments of chicks, ducklings and other young fowl remains a pressing problem.

    “Most people can tell you that chicken meat can have salmonella in it,” she said, “but they can’t tell you that live chickens have salmonella.”

    Since 1990, however, there have been 35 outbreaks of salmonella tied to contact with shipments of live, young poultry. CDC officials are investigating two separate outbreaks now, strains of salmonella Altona and salmonella Johannesburg, which together have sickened nearly 100 people in 24 states.

    It was the salmonella Montevideo outbreak, though, that sent CDC officials scrambling to find out the source of infections whose victims were mostly children under the age of 5.

    80 percent of infections from 'Hatchery C'
    In the end, about 80 percent of the illnesses were traced back to Hatchery C, which can ship as many as 250,000 birds a week in the spring, the peak season, according to the report. Even after the hatchery took steps to curtail salmonella transmission, the infections dropped, but did not stop.

    Young poultry can become infected with salmonella through contact with birds from different sources, through contact with infected hens or through contaminated feed. Mail-order birds may be stressed by the shipping process, which can make them shed the bacteria.

    That demonstrates the difficulty of eliminating salmonella transmission in live poultry, which can swap the bacteria and carry and shed it unnoticed, even though the birds appear healthy, Behravesh said.

    Even when state agriculture officials have forced hatcheries to get rid of their birds, clean up the sites and start over, salmonella outbreaks have erupted again.

    “Shutting down the hatcheries is not necessarily the answer here,” Behravesh said.

    There are some 20 hatcheries in the U.S. that ship an estimated 50 million live poultry by mail-order every year, generating between $50 million and $70 million a year, said CDC officials, citing unpublished data.

    In 2011, the U.S. Postal Service shipped some 237,778 boxes or 1.7 million pounds of live poultry, spokeswoman Sue Brennan told msnbc.com.

    Many of those birds go to agricultural feed stores, where they may be sold as Easter pets. Others are shipped directly to urban farmers, including many who have adopted the recent trend of raising backyard flocks of chickens.

    In this outbreak, the number of illnesses peaked in May of 2006, forcing interventions at Hatchery C, the paper reported.

    Those included beefing up biosecurity and rodent control, decontaminating feed, replacing and updating old equipment, changing airflow, improving testing and giving vaccines to adult birds.

    Such steps may be recommended, but not required, by the National Poultry Improvement Plan, a program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. All compliance is voluntary, Behravesh noted.

    Still, even after that effort, the salmonella infections didn’t cease completely, Behravesh said.

    The CDC researchers called for more targeted efforts to raise awareness about the danger of salmonella infections from live poultry. Only about 21 percent of patients interviewed said they knew that poultry could transmit salmonella and only 7 percent said they were warned about the risk at the time of purchase.

    Part of the problem is that people regard the young poultry as pets, often buying chicks dyed neon colors as holiday favors.

    “You can make them pink, blue, green or orange,” she said. “They’re very attractive to children.”

    Instead, parents and caregivers should realize the poultry is intended as food, not for play, and make sure to practice proper hygiene. Make sure kids wash their hands with soap and running water after every contact with poultry. Take steps to avoid cross-contamination of food and surfaces, such as counters and tables. 

    “Do not put the duckling in the bathtub, don’t keep them in the kitchen,” Behravesh advised. 

    Related stories in Vitals: 

    • Nearly 1,000 dogs now sick from jerky treats, FDA says
    • Heavy metal singer slammed by salmonella sushi
    • 66 sickened in salmonella outbreak linked to turtles

     

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JoNel Aleccia, Senior Writer, NBC News

JoNel Aleccia is an award-winning national health reporter at NBC News. She has spent more than 25 years covering health, food safety, education and social issues for newspaper and online readers.

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