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03-14-2015 02:27 PM
BRENHAM, Texas -- The FDA has issued an advisory after five cases of listeriosis were linked to Blue Bell ice cream products from the production facility in Brenham.
All five patients ate the ice cream while being treated at a single hospital in Kansas between January 2014 and January 2015. Three of them died.
No one suspected the infection came from ice cream until four strains of Listeria monocytogenes were found in Blue Bell products last month by the South Carolina Health Department.
03-14-2015 02:39 PM
Anybody can eat infected or tainted food. You don't even know it's bad until it makes you sick. Recalls do help on that issue somewhat. Buts its still scary. You never know if your going to eat the bad food. I wonder if it tasted any different.
03-14-2015 02:43 PM
It's my understanding that the tainted products were part of a service line production - meaning those particular items went to such places as hosptials.
I won't touch Blue Bell Ice Cream myself.
03-14-2015 04:08 PM
I read yesterday that two people have died from eating the infected ice cream.
I sure hope there's going to be an independent investigation to see how this could have happened.
03-14-2015 05:01 PM
Three of the five Kansas hospital patients who developed a foodborne illness linked to a few Blue Bell ice cream products have died prompting the first recall of the product in its 108-year history.
Five people developed listeriosis in Kansas after eating products from one production line at the Blue Bell creamery in Brenham, Texas, according to a statement from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Friday.
Listeria bacteria was found in samples of Chocolate Chip Country Cookies, Great Divide Bars, Sour Pop Green Apple Bars, Cotton Candy Bars, Scoops, Vanilla Stick Slices, Almond Bars and No Sugar Added Moo Bars, the FDA said.
The company said regular Moo Bars were uncontaminated its half gallons, quarts, pints, cups, three-gallon ice cream and take-home frozen snack novelties.
According to a Friday statement from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, all five of the people sickened were receiving treatment for unrelated health issues at the same Kansas hospital before developing listeriosis, "a finding that strongly suggests their infections (with listeria bacteria) were acquired in the hospital," the CDC said.
Information was only available on four of the five patients. All four had consumed milkshakes with a single-serving Blue Bell ice cream product called “Scoops” while in the hospital, the CDC said.
"Scoops," as well as the other suspect Blue Bell items, are mostly food service items and not produced for retail, said Paul Kruse, CEO of the Brenham creamery
The listeria isolated from specimens taken from four of the patients at Via Christi St. Francis hospital in Wichita, Kansas matched the strains of contaminant from the Blue Bell products.
The five patients became ill with listeriosis during their hospitalizations for unrelated causes between December 2013 and January 2015, said hospital spokeswoman Maria Loving.
"Via Christi was not aware of any listeria contamination in the Blue Bell Creameries ice cream products and immediately removed all Blue Bell Creameries products from all Via Christi locations once the potential contamination was discovered," Loving said in a statement Friday to The Associated Press.
Kruse said the company removed products from the shelves as soon as it was alerted about the contamination.
"The only time it can be contaminated is at the time of production," he said. That contamination has been traced to a machine that extrudes the ice cream into forms and onto cookies, and that machine remains off line, he said.
All products now on store and institution shelves are safe, Kruse said.
The CDC said contaminated ice cream products may still be in consumers’ freezers.
Listeriosis is a life-threatening infection caused by eating food contaminated with bacteria called Listeria monocytogenes, the CDC said. The disease primarily affects pregnant women and their newborns, older adults, and people with immune systems weakened by cancer, cancer treatments, or other serious conditions.
A person with listeriosis usually has fever and muscle aches, sometimes preceded by diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms. Almost everyone who is diagnosed with listeriosis has invasive infection, meaning the bacteria spread from their intestines to the blood, causing bloodstream infection, or to the central nervous system, causing meningitis. Although people can sometimes develop listeriosis up to two months after eating contaminated food, symptoms usually start within several days. Listeriosis is treated with antibiotics, the CDC said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report
03-14-2015 08:15 PM
03-14-2015 09:05 PM
This isn't the first time Blue Bell ice cream products have been a problem. A few years back, all the ice cream I had purchased for the facility I worked for had to be returned because of a contamination problem.
03-14-2015 10:45 PM
I don't think we have that brand in Cali......but then I also don't eat ice cream so I'm no judge on it...................................raven
03-14-2015 10:59 PM
03-15-2015 02:16 AM
On 3/14/2015 Kachina624 said: I love, love, love Blue Bell but never buy anything except the 1/2 gal containers. I will definitely keep buying it. Wish I had some right now.
I agree. Drooling right now.
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