At least 481 people in 25 sates have been sickened in the national Salmonella outbreak tied to Foster Farms brand chicken, according to the latest outbreak update from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Since the last update on Jan. 16, 51 new cases have been reported from five states: Arizona (3), California (44), Hawaii (1), Tennessee (1), and Utah (2).
The first case of illness was reported on March 1, 2013, just over one year ago.
The illnesses are tied to chicken processed at three Foster Farms plants in California. Foster Farms did not issue a recall for any of the chicken from those plants, but allegedly implemented unspecified additional safety measures according to a request from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). One plant did close down temporarily because of an alleged cockroach infestation.
Due to the time involved in tracing an illness back to a specific food product, Salmonella cases that have occurred as part of this outbreak since Jan. 29, 2014, might not yet be counted among the official CDC total.
According to CDC, the outbreak strains of Salmonella Heidelberg are resistant to several commonly prescribed antibiotics.
“Although these antibiotics are not typically used to treat Salmonella bloodstream infections or other severe Salmonella infections, antibiotic resistance can increase the risk of hospitalization in infected individuals,” CDC said.
Salmonella is considered to be relatively common on raw poultry, and it is not considered an adulterant. A recent Consumer Reports survey of retail chicken breasts found Salmonella on 11 percent of samples.