The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), along with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) and state and local partners, previously
reported on December 12, 2019, that public health experts
were tracking three separate outbreaks linked to romaine lettuce caused by
three different strains of E. coli O157:H7. We also reported that, through the
FDA’s traceback investigation, we were able to identify a common grower between
each of these outbreaks in Salinas, California based on available supply chain
information.
The FDA is providing an update on the status of the E. coli O157:H7 illnesses linked to romaine lettuce, along with recent findings based on our investigation of fields linked to a common grower, which was identified in our traceback. It should be noted that romaine from this grower does not explain all of the illnesses seen in these outbreaks.
Outbreaks declared over,
consumer advisory lifted
The FDA is lifting the consumer
advisory to avoid romaine lettuce from Salinas as the growing season for this
region is over, and there is no longer a need for consumers to avoid it. There
is also no need to avoid other produce products from Salinas.
The FDA and CDC have been tracking two multi-state romaine lettuce outbreaks. Federal health officials are declaring both multi-state romaine lettuce outbreaks over. One of the outbreaks sickened 167 people in 27 states. The other outbreak, linked to Fresh Express salad kits, sickened 10 people in five states.
There was also a third outbreak in Washington
State that sickened 11 people. This outbreak has also been
declared over.
The last reported illness onset
date for all the outbreaks was December 21, 2019. Based on this information, it
appears that our November
22, 2019 advisory to not eat romaine from Salinas played an
important role in preventing illnesses and containing this outbreak because it
prompted the removal of romaine lettuce from Salinas from the marketplace and
warned consumers to throw away romaine from that growing region.
Common grower, multiple
fields investigated
The FDA traceback investigation for
these outbreaks required investigators to go through hundreds of supply chain
records to find a commonality to a single grower with multiple fields. We were
able to narrow this down further to at least 10 fields in the lower Salinas
Valley.
Investigators from the FDA, CDC,
the California Department of Food and Agriculture and the California Department
of Public Health, visited several of these fields and took a variety of samples
from water, soil and compost. So far, sample results have come back negative
for all of the three outbreak strains of E. coli O157:H7. However, we did find
a strain of E. coli that is unrelated to any illnesses in a soil sample taken
near a run-off point in a buffer zone between a field where product was
harvested and where cattle are known to occasionally graze. This could be an
important clue that will be further examined as our investigation continues.
However, this clue does not explain the illnesses seen in these outbreaks.
Our investigation is ongoing, and
we are doing everything possible to find the source or sources of
contamination. The investigation into how this contamination occurred is
important, so romaine growers can implement measures that will prevent future
contamination and illnesses.
The FDA is planning to conduct an
additional, in-depth, root-cause investigation. The investigation will further
characterize how contamination might have occurred and will inform what
preventive controls are needed to prevent future outbreaks. Once complete, we
plan to issue a prompt report and share lessons learned, so that growers can
implement best practices to protect consumers from contaminated produce.
Investigation will inform
future prevention
As we mentioned in our last update,
it is important to remember that millions of servings of fresh leafy greens are
safely eaten every day by consumers, although the repeat nature of these
outbreaks linked to leafy greens – and more specifically to romaine lettuce –
remains a concern.
We are doing our part by continuing
our sampling assignment to monitor for pathogens in romaine lettuce across the
nation. Industry can and must do their part too. Everyone across the romaine
supply chain must do everything possible to fully understand why and how these
outbreaks keep happening and continue to aggressively implement preventive
measures to further protect consumers.
Outbreaks illustrate need to
stay focused on prevention
It’s critical that all
stakeholders, including growers, processors, distributors and retailers, stay laser-focused
on prevention to help bend the curve of foodborne illness. We understand the
importance of food safety, and we know there’s a human face to every foodborne
illness.
The FDA remains committed to doing
everything we can to prevent outbreaks, working with fellow regulators and the
food industry to identify and address causes and keep consumers aware of
potential risks.
Rest assured that we are working
hard every day to try to prevent foodborne illness. We also know that food
safety is a shared responsibility. It involves food producers, distributors,
manufacturers, retailers and certainly regulatory officials at the federal,
state, local, territorial and tribal levels. That’s why we work directly with
our partners on things such as training and inspections. We also work closely
with industry, so they understand our requirements and are educated on the
latest scientific standards and good agricultural practices. Working together,
we have and will continue to advance food safety.
A New Era of Smarter Food
Safety
While we will always place emphasis
on prevention, being able to promptly respond to an outbreak when it occurs is
a critical part of our food safety mission.
As public health agencies have
gotten better at detecting foodborne illnesses, our ability to trace back to
the source of contaminated foods that may have caused the illnesses has lagged,
due in part to the lack of modernized food traceability capabilities.
As part of the FDA’s New
Era of Smarter Food Safety initiative, we plan to use
advances in technology to improve our ability to track and trace products
through the supply chain. We’ll be launching a New Era of Smarter Food Safety
Blueprint in early 2020 that will outline how we will advance our work in this
area. This blueprint will help consumers get information more quickly, enabling
people to better protect themselves and their families.
We look forward to continuing our work with growers, processors, distributors and retailers in our shared efforts to protect consumers, and we will continue to provide updated information as it becomes available.
More information on FDA food safety web site
More information on CDC site