There's a cheap spinach joke in there somewhere, but I'm not going to take it. Hardly anyone dies from the E. Coli O157:H7 bug. That's why this story is alarming to me.
The Centers for Disease Control has good information on O157:H7 here:
Escherichia coli O157:H7 is an emerging cause of foodborne illness. An estimated 73,000 cases of infection and 61 deaths occur in the United States each year. Infection often leads to bloody diarrhea, and occasionally to kidney failure. Most illness has been associated with eating undercooked, contaminated ground beef. Person-to-person contact in families and child care centers is also an important mode of transmission. Infection can also occur after drinking raw milk and after swimming in or drinking sewage-contaminated water...Personally, I've never taken care of anyone with this infection. But, in reading about it and in talking with some physicians, you definitely do not want this. Hopefully, this outbreak will be brought under control soon, and the amount of illness will be limited.
Most persons recover without antibiotics or other specific treatment in 5-10 days. There is no evidence that antibiotics improve the course of disease, and it is thought that treatment with some antibiotics may precipitate kidney complications. Antidiarrheal agents, such as loperamide (Imodium), should also be avoided.
10 comments:
I guess I can live without spinach; just dont mess with my chocolate.
geez, i had bagged spinach at least 4 times this week. is that a time bomb i hear ticking? wish me luck.
Scary! Makes me wonder what they are using for fertilizer.
I'm on blood thinners for the rest of my life, so I can't have a lot of spinach...although I often now find myself "green" with envy when I see Popeye. Stupid sailor...
Oh holy smokes! And I've been feeding spinach to my transplant kid in his salad every day to try to boost his nutrition a bit. I never even saw this anywhere until I saw it here. So glad you posted it! How scary!
E. coli O157:H7 is a very nasty bug - see, www,about-ecoli.com and www.about-hus.com. Keep current on this outbreak at www.marlerblog.com
This is the danger of linking with your site (as I've done, thank you): I was definitely going for the cheap spinach joke. I had the post all but written on the train this morning.
Now I'm shamed into reconsidering it.
(Don't worry, I'll get over it....)
I gave up spinach for Swiss Chard years ago ... and haven't had any of that lately, either, since this is our first year in forever without a garden.
However - I don't grocery shop, my chef son and my husband buy all of the groceries, so just in case someone gets the idea that some fresh bagged spinach would be "nice," I'll pass on the info!
Thank you!
for those wondering about speculations on how the E.coli got into the spinach, I just posted about manure spraying & sludge on my spinach posting at It's A Blog Eat Blog World
www.morgenfiles.blogspot.com
I knew that most E.coli strains were antibiotic resistant (and my post speculates on that, too) but I'd never heard you're not supposed to take anti-diarrheals. why's that?
I normally buy two bags of spinach every week or so. One of my absolute favorite meals at home is a spinach salad with fresh fruit and toasted walnuts or toasted almonds. I usually eat a spinach salad at least once a day. Spinach is a favorite of mine but I doubt I will be in the mood for it after this.
Fortunately, I was tired of it and switched to romaine lettuce last week. I tossed the remaining bag of spinach out today.
Dream Mom
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