Title: 2006 Spinach Outbreak Environmental Investigation
12006 Spinach Outbreak Environmental Investigation
- Patrick Kennelly
- California Department of Public Health
- Food and Drug Branch
- Barbara Cassens
- US Food and Drug Administration
- San Francisco District
2E. coli O157H7 and Spinach
- Timeline in the investigation
- Sept. 13, 2006
- First notifications of cluster of E. coli O157H7
illnesses - Sept. 14, 2006
- CDC issues health alert
- FDA issues health warning
- Sept. 15, 2006
- CalFERT team is dispatched to Processor X
- Processor X announces recall of all products
containing spinach
3E. coli O157H7 and Spinach
- Timeline in the investigation
- Sept. 21, 2006
- 3 California counties identified in traceback as
source of spinach - First positive E. coli found in bagged spinach
from consumer with specific lot identified,
P227AO3 - Sept. 24, 2006
- Second confirmed positive from product from UT
with lot code P227A01 - Traceback leads to 4 ranches that supplied
spinach to lot P227. - Sept. 26, 2006
- Third confirmed positive from product, PA with
lot code P227 - Oct. 12, 2006
- FDA and CDHS announce finding matching isolate to
outbreak pattern from a ranch in environmental
sample.
4E. coli O157H7 and Spinach
- Timeline in the investigation
- Mar. 22, 2007
- FDA and CDHS issue joint report on environmental
investigation
5Dole Baby Spinach Lot P227
6E. Coli O157H7 and Spinach
- 204 confirmed cases in 26 states
- 1 confirmed case in one Canadian province
- 104 hospitalizations (51)
- 31 Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (15)
- 3 deaths
7Thursday, October 5, Â 2006 E. Coli Kills Idaho
Toddler Spinach Plants Probed
Thursday, October 12, 2006 E. Coli Strain in
Tainted Spinach Is Linked to California Cattle
Ranch
Thursday, October 12, 2006 Source of Deadly E.
Coli Is Found
8E. coli O157H7 and Spinach
- Environmental samples collected
- High volume of samples collected
- Consisted of
- Water
- Soil/sediment
- Cow and wild pig feces
- Field product
- Environmental samples from processor
9E. coli O157H7 and Spinach
- Environmental testing results
- E. coli O157H7 found on all 4 ranches
- 28/45 (62) E. coli O157H7 isolates from one
ranch matched the outbreak strain - 4 stream water/sediment
- 1 dust/dirt from pasture
- 8 wild pig/wild pig feces
- 15 cow feces
- 13/87 (15) of wild pigs sampled on Ranch X
positive for O157.
10Overview of Environment
11Leafy Green OutbreaksWhat are the contributing
factors?
12Effect of Surface Water
River
Courtesy of R. Gelting, CDC
13California Food Emergency Response Team
CalFERT
- A partnership between CDHS, FDA-SANDO, FDA-LOSDO
and CFSAN. -
- Conceived in 1999 and fully implemented in 2005
to address recurring problems in environmental
investigations of foodborne outbreaks.
14California Food Emergency Response Team
CalFERT
- Overseen by a Steering Committee
-
- Team Leads Assigned from each Agency
- Core Team Members Regularly Meet and Train
Together - Specialized Training and Skills
- Laboratory Personnel
15California Food Emergency Response Team
CalFERT
- Decision to Deploy
- Team Leads Establish ICS Structure Team
Assignments -
- Equipment, Supplies, Hotels, Meeting Place
- Assignments Prioritized Daily
- Regular Update Reports to Management
16California Food Emergency Response Team
CalFERT
- Demobilization
- Reports
- Unified Format
- Lead Identified
- Divide Conquer the Report Components
- Joint Management Revue
- Consensus
-
17California Food Emergency Response Team
CalFERT
- Key to Success
- Good Communication
-
- Staff Training
- FLEXIBILITY
18California Food Emergency Response Team CalFERT
- Interdisciplinary team of experienced
investigators and PhD level scientists. - May not work in every state
- Sufficient number of outbreaks to maintain
knowledge and proficiency - Very positive working relationship between
federal and state agencies - Highly trained and experienced staff (not routine
inspections) - Written protocols
- Extensive reports
19Lessons Learned
- CalFERT partnership and collaboration
- Team approach
- Incident Command Structure
- Laboratory collaboration
- Improved Lab Methods
- http//www.dhs.ca.gov/fdlb/microbiology/RIMS.O157_
final_5-04-07.pdf - Utilize the latest in technology to communicate
- GPS coordinates
- Digital photos
- High speed internet access
20Lessons Learned
- Daily Communication
- Resources
- Exercise and utilize resources
- Leafy Greens Initiative
- Standardized forms
- Farm investigation questionnaire
- FOOD!
- A fed team is productive team
21E. coli O157H7 and Spinach - Conclusions
- Still do not know exactly how pathogens came into
contact with spinach. Lots of speculation based
on observations at Ranch X. - Wild pigs
- Surface water contamination of well water
- Cattle
- Dust/Airborne
- Previously identified risk factors still relevant
- Direct fecal contamination from domestic animals
and/or wildlife - Water (contaminated with feces)
- Manure as fertilizer
- Workers
22Conclusions
- An estimated 4,000 cases of E. coli O157
infection associated with one lot of bagged
spinach. - Quick actions likely averted additional cases.
- Large amount of resources dedicated to
investigation and communication during the event.
- No conclusive evidence of how contamination
occurred. - This was the 20th outbreak of O157H7 linked to
leafy greens in the last 12 years. - CDFA Marketing Agreement
23Findings from current and past leafy green
investigations
- Pre-harvest/harvest phases of production is the
most likely opportunity for introduction of
contamination - Post harvest (cooling, processing, shipping,
retail) practices may contribute to spreading the
contamination over thousands of bags and/or may
permit growth of the organism. - Current processing practice of chlorinating/monito
ring the chlorine levels of flume water as a CCP
is not sufficient to control large scale
contamination. Additional barriers and better
monitoring procedures are needed.
24Acknowledgements
- California Department of Public Health
- Food and Drug Branch
- Emergency Response Unit
- Food Safety Inspection Unit
- Food and Drug Laboratory Branch
- Microbial Disease Laboratory
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration
- Office of Regulatory Affairs
- San Francisco District
- Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
- Centers for Disease Control
- National Center for Environmental Health
- U.S. Department of Agriculture
- Wildlife Service
- Agriculture Research Service
25Thank You!
- pat.kennelly_at_cdph.ca.gov
- barbara.cassens_at_fda.hhs.gov