Guest guest Posted June 7, 2011 Report Share Posted June 7, 2011 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2000210/E-coli-outbreak-Fears-reached-Am\ erica-Virginia-girl-dies.html American E.coli fears as toddler dies and more fall ill... on the day the Agriculture Secretary says it won't happen in U.S. By Bates Last updated at 5:00 PM on 7th June 2011 A girl of two who died at the weekend had been infected with E.coli sparking fears of a Germany-style outbreak in America - as the Agriculture Secretary said it could never happen here. The child, from Dryden, Virginia, died after being exposed to the lethal strain that already appears to have spread throughout the South. Health officials have admitted that in Tennessee one child is in hospital and several others are being treated for exposure to the virus. The disclosures have stoked fears that the U.S. could be heading for a similar outbreak as that which hit Germany in which 23 people have died and 2,330 are ill. But they came on the day that Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack made the extraordinary claim he was `reasonably confident' that America will not face a similar crisis. In an interview he would only say that the development `reinforces that we need to remain vigilant here about food safety'. In the wake of the crisis in Germany, the European Commission has proposed a $219m aid package for farmers who have been affected. Today public health experts sharply contradicted Mr Vilsack saying that a serious outbreak in the U.S. was already upon us. `Could it happen here? It already has,' infectious disease expert Larry Lutwick of SUNY-Downstate College of Medicine in Brooklyn told USA Today. Tests have revealed that the two-year-old victim died after exposure to E.coli 0157:H7, which is known to cause sickness in humans. She was taken to the Pediatric Unit of the Medical Centre in Washington County, Tennessee with bloody diarrhea but died soon after. A coroner's report said that she was `believed to be exposed to E.coli from a contaminated pool'. Her brother was also reportedly taken to hospital with similar symptoms. A spokesman for the Virginia Department of health confirmed it was investigating the death but that it was too early to tell the cause. `We can confirm the death of a child (within the last few days) in the Western Region of Virginia, said . `The child was ill with a toxin-producing bacterial infection in the gastrointestinal tract. The investigation is continuing. We are awaiting lab results. E.coli is one of a number of things that can cause these types of infections.' In Tennessee Northeast Regional Health Office Medical Director Dr Kirschke confirmed several cases of a similar strain. `We have one case of the severe type in Tennessee,' Dr Kirschke said. `It may be similar to what the two kids from Virginia had. `Everyone is doing fine. From the initial tests, these look like the less severe type of E coli. We are treating it like an outbreak. We are investigating it like an outbreak.' EU agriculture ministers were forced to hold crisis talks after sales of salad vegetables plunged. Apart from one victim from Sweden, all the victims have been in Germany although twelve countries are affected. The source has been pinpointed to bean sprouts from a farm the north of the country but in a surprising development more than half of the samples examined from its grounds have tested negative for E.coli. Epidemiologist Elaine Scallan of the University of Colorado in Denver said that the fact food is not grown locally and comes from all over the world `poses a lot of challenges' for health officials. `We are relying on state and local health departments to pick up these outbreaks, just like their equivalents in Europe,' she said. Authorities have instructed people to thoroughly cook their meat, wash raw fruits and vegetables, and avoid swimming in places like rivers and lakes that could have access to agricultural run-off. In Europe emergency talks are being held by EU agricultural ministers as they discuss whether to compensate European farms for losses incurred by the outbreak. The EU's farm chief has proposed £150 million ($219 million) in aid to help producers hit by the continent's E.coli contamination crisis. European Union Farm Commissioner Dacian Ciolos said today agriculture ministers will consider whether farmers can recoup from EU coffers up to 30 percent of the cost of vegetables that cannot be sold because of the German E.coli crisis. The European Commission is considering lifting restrictions on state aid to the sector to allow governments to bail out those forced to dump their produce while the search continues for the cause of the strain. Germany has been warned to take more care over its food safety announcements in the wake of the E.coli fiasco which caused panic across Europe. The European Union health chief said it must guard against premature - and inaccurate - conclusions on the source of contaminated food. Health Commissioner Dalli told the EU parliament in Strasbourg that such public information must be scientifically sound and foolproof before it becomes public. Over the past days Germany first pointed a finger at Spanish cucumbers, then at local bean sprouts, before backtracking on both. The 'all-clear' for Spanish cucumbers came too late to halt the mass destruction of the vegetable - not just in Spain but across the continent as consumers avoided buying them in the wake of 22 deaths in Germany. Sales have plummeted and prices dropped and the same fate threatens bean sprouts and any other farm product named as the possible cause before tests have been completed. A Commission spokesman said: 'There has been a drop in consumption around Europe and it is important that we find a European solution to what is an EU-wide problem at the moment, to support fruit and vegetable growers across the EU.' He went on: 'The Commission is looking at various legal options which are available, covering farmers who are members of producer organisation and those that are not.' Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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