Saturday 25 June 2011

BRITISH officials warned against eating uncooked sprouts after French authorities linked seeds to an E coli outbreak.



France halted the sale of fenugreek, mustard and arugula sprout seeds from British mail order seed and plant company Thompson and Morgan after eight people were hospitalised following an E coli outbreak.

French investigators found that two of them were sickened after consuming sprouts from the three seed types in the southwestern town of Begles, a suburb of Bordeaux.

Some of those affected were infected by the same strain of E coli that has killed 44 people - all but one in Germany - and sickened more than 3700 in recent weeks.

In a statement, Thompson and Morgan said the link being made by French officials was unsubstantiated, adding that it believed that "something local in the Bordeaux area, or the way the product has been handled and grown, is responsible for the incident rather than our seeds".



A spokesman for Britain's Food Safety Agency said officials "don't have definitive evidence that the company is the source of the contamination", that no food poisoning cases have been reported in the UK, and that investigations are ongoing. But in what the agency described as a precautionary move, it released a statement warning that "sprouted seeds should only be eaten if they have been cooked thoroughly until steaming hot throughout".

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, in line with department policy, noted that European health authorities have misattributed the source of E coli outbreaks in the past. Spanish cucumbers, for example, were wrongly blamed for the illnesses in Germany.

Thompson and Morgan said French officials are still testing the seeds and investigating how they were grown. In the meantime, the company said it has submitted samples of its seeds to British health authorities for investigation.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...