logo
FDA issues most dangerous recall for salads that carry 'reasonable risk of DEATH'

FDA issues most dangerous recall for salads that carry 'reasonable risk of DEATH'

Daily Mail​26-06-2025
Health officials are warning Americans to avoid pre-made salads over fears of potential salmonella contamination.
The FDA has issued a Class I recall for 946 cases of refrigerated deli salads made by Isabelle's Kitchen, Inc.
Officials said that the products contain fresh cucumbers that were contaminated with salmonella - a foodborne illness that can cause diarrhea, fever and stomach pains in healthy adults.
The bacterial infection can prove to be fatal for young children, frail or elderly people, and those with weakened immune systems.
The FDA has already recalled 75,000 pounds of salmonella-contaminated cucumbers that were produced by Bedner Grower's, Inc. and were used in the deli salad boxed last week.
The newest affected products include Kings Greek Pasta Salad, IKI Greek Pasta Salad, MAF Mediterranean Pasta Salad, MAF Crunchy Wheatberry Salad, MAF Quinoa Tabouli and Powerhouse Wheatberry Salad Kit.
All of the recalled salad boxes have a code of either 134, 135 or 136 and were manufactured by May 27 to June 1, 2025.
According to the FDA, the contaminated salads were sold in various local supermarkets in New Hampshire, Florida, Maryland, South Carolina, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Virginia.
A Class I recall is the most serious warning and indicates that consuming the salad will cause serious adverse health consequences or even death.
As of now, no illnesses caused by the recalled items have been reported.
The agency noted that the recalled salads have been packed in white plastic containers inside a white or brown corrugated box under the brand names 'Isabelle's Kitchen,' 'Maple Avenue Foods,' or 'Kings.'
In its official recall notice, the FDA further warned: 'Any repacked items sold at the supermarket level may not carry the same sell by date as identified on the original package, but would not exceed the original manufacture sell by date.'
Apart from disposing the boxes, consumers have been asked to return them to the store of purchase for a refund.
All three manufacturers have also been asked to cease sale/distribution of the recalled products, to remove the boxes from store shelves and/or warehouse locations and to destroy all remaining items.
No other products made by Kings, Isabelle's Kitchen and Maple Avenue Foods have been contaminated by the bacteria.
Salmonella, or salmonellosis, is a infection caused by the bacteria and is one of the most common bacterial infections in the US.
About 1.35million people are estimated to be infected by salmonella in the US every year, while 26,500 are hospitalized and 420 die from the infections.
Most people sickened with salmonella suffer from a four- to six-day illness that causes stomach cramps, diarrhea and abdominal pain.
But officials warn children under five and adults over 65 are more at risk from the bacteria because they have a weaker immune system.
In serious cases, the bacteria can cause bloody stools and prolonged vomiting. People can die from salmonella via dehydration or if the bacteria enters the bloodstream, which can lead to sepsis — a life-threatening reaction.
People suffering from inflammatory bowel syndrome and those with weakened immune systems due to conditions such as HIV are ALSO at A higher risk.
Healthcare providers suggest drinking fluids including water, broth and oral rehydration solutions to help treat the infection.
However, in severe cases, doctors may prescribe antibiotics such as Ciprofloxacin and Azithromycin.
In May, Florida-based Bedner Growers, Inc, voluntarily recalled all cucumbers sold at Bedner's Farm Fresh Market between April 29 and May 14, 2025, because they could be contaminated with salmonella.
The recalled cucumbers were sold to consumers at three Bedner's Farm Fresh Markets locations in Florida (Boynton Beach, Delray Beach, and West Palm Beach).
They were also sold to a wholesalers, restaurants, retailers and distribution centers.
Officials found salmonella bacteria from samples on the farm that matched samples from people who got sick.
The FDA said because the recalled cucumbers don't have specific stickers or labeling, customers should discard and not consume any cucumbers purchased from these locations between the affected dates.
The tainted cucumbers have been linked by the FDA to a salmonella outbreak that has sickened 26 people in Alabama, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Kansas, Kenticky, Michigan, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UnitedHealth jumps after 'vote of confidence' from Warren Buffett
UnitedHealth jumps after 'vote of confidence' from Warren Buffett

Reuters

time7 minutes ago

  • Reuters

UnitedHealth jumps after 'vote of confidence' from Warren Buffett

Aug 15 (Reuters) - Shares of UnitedHealth Group (UNH.N), opens new tab surged more than 11% in premarket trading on Friday after a fresh investment from billionaire Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa.N), opens new tab boosted investor confidence in the troubled health conglomerate. The company is dealing with multiple challenges that have emerged in the last two years, including rising costs, a federal investigation into its government-backed health plans, a cyberattack at its technology unit that affected the personal information of over 192 million Americans, and the murder of its insurance unit chief in December. Long hailed as a reliable earnings performer, UnitedHealth missed Wall Street's profit expectations for the last two quarters, and its shares have dropped nearly 46% in 2025, making it the worst-performing stock on the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI), opens new tab this year. The shares were last up 11% at $301.42 in premarket trading. Buffett has swooped in with big investments in companies, in which he sees a long-term strategic value, during their periods of struggle. He invested heavily in Occidental Petroleum (OXY.N), opens new tab in 2019 as it tried to finance a merger with Anadarko Petroleum and has kept adding to his stake despite the company's weak stock performance. He famously took a stake in investment bank Goldman Sachs (GS.N), opens new tab at the height of the global financial crisis in 2008. "Buffett's purchase is a psychological reassurance to many investors that saw UnitedHealth as 'untouchable,' given the massive turbulence in the stock over the past few months," said Kevin Gade, chief operating officer at UnitedHealth investor Bahl & Gaynor. Berkshire owned 5.04 million UnitedHealth shares worth about $1.57 billion as of June 30, it said in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Thursday. Several other prominent hedge funds, including David Tepper's Appaloosa Management, Lone Pine Capital and Two Sigma Investments, also bought UnitedHealth's shares, regulatory filings showed on Thursday. While the "vote of confidence" from Buffett's investment validates the long-term value of UnitedHealth shares, the "management needs to regain trust and credibility with investors, and get back to its beat and raise reputation of the past," said James Harlow, senior vice president at Novare Capital Management. In May, CEO Andrew Witty abruptly stepped down amid rising operational and financial pressures, and Stephen Hemsley, who had run the company from 2006 to 2017, took over. Last month, the company projected full-year adjusted earnings per share of at least $16, well short of analysts' already lowered estimate of $20.91. UnitedHealth's shares are currently trading at about 15.8 times forward earnings estimates, below their five-year average of 19. "While UnitedHealth still faces elevated uncertainty, it is good to see that this renowned investment firm also believes the market is discounting assumptions that are too pessimistic for the long term, which is similar to our view," said Morningstar analyst Julie Utterback. Shares of rivals Centene (CNC.N), opens new tab, Humana (HUM.N), opens new tab and Molina Healthcare (MOH.N), opens new tab gained between 1.5% and 4% in premarket trading. Berkshire on Thursday also disclosed new stakes in steel maker Nucor (NUE.N), opens new tab, security products provider Allegion (ALLE.N), opens new tab and outdoor advertiser Lamar Advertising (LAMR.O), opens new tab. Nucor jumped 5.8% to $152.80.

Booze up: is gen-Z's ‘sensible' relationship with alcohol moving towards hedonism?
Booze up: is gen-Z's ‘sensible' relationship with alcohol moving towards hedonism?

The Guardian

time37 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Booze up: is gen-Z's ‘sensible' relationship with alcohol moving towards hedonism?

Gen-Z have long been hailed as 'generation sensible' – dozens of articles have charted how they drink less alcohol, exercise more, eat healthier and have ditched night clubs for book clubs. But could that be about to change? Recent data has shown the proportion of gen Z – those born roughly between 1997 and 2012 – who are of legal drinking age and have consumed alcohol in the past six months has risen by 7% between 2024 and 2025. Alcopops are apparently all the rage among gen-Z customers, with booming sales of Smirnoff Ice, Bacardi Breezers and BuzzBallz, while last year's 'brat summer' was said to herald the end of the clean living era. The reality, experts say, is more complicated than that. 'We're seeing a generational recalibration, not a simple return to hedonism,' said Ivo Vlaev, a professor of behavioural science at Warwick University. 'This isn't a simple return to the past – it's a complex blend of coping, compensation, identity expression and socioeconomic constraint. The behaviours may look familiar, but the psychology behind them has evolved.' He said the fact that gen-Z came of age during a pandemic, climate crisis and increased concerns over the cost of living was a recipe for 'psychological whiplash'. Key factors at play included a rebound from the restrictions of the Covid era with young people now 'reasserting agency through social behaviours'. Vlaev said research showed that 'when autonomy is suppressed, people later overcompensate with behaviours that signal freedom or control'. There was also an element of 'self-soothing' as a result of rising levels of anxiety, depression and loneliness, as well as the glamorisation of certain drinks and behaviours on TikTok. Financial concerns may have also pushed the younger generation towards 'present-biased decision-making'. 'When the future feels unstable, people are less likely to invest in long-term health and more likely to seek short-term mood boosts, like alcohol or late nights out,' he said. Vlaev also said an element of 'wellness culture' fatigue had probably set in. 'Some gen-Zers are pushing back against the pressure to optimise every aspect of life,' he said. Richard Halstead, chief operation officer of consumer research at drinks market analysis company IWSR, said: 'From a consumer research and data point of view, it does seem there is some pushback on this idea that we're all perfect, having perfect pictures taken of us on Instagram and we're all super in control of our lives. 'Every cultural move has a countercultural move associated with it.' He said gen Z's attitudes towards drinking and socialising was more nuanced than is often portrayed in the media – gen Z were not 'puritans' who abstain from alcohol, but nor did they like booze as much as previous generations. 'The idea that gen Z do not drink at all or that they have turned their backs on alcohol is not supported by data,' he said. 'The idea that they have a different relationship with alcohol compared to previous generations is supported by data.' He said that, for instance, gen-Z were more likely to drink a wider variety of alcohols, and drink out in bars and restaurants. 'Their pattern of behaviour is actually going out for a reason, as opposed to just meeting for a pint in the pub because the pub's there and you've got nothing better to do,' he said. Dr Laura Tinner, a research fellow at the Centre for Public Health at the University of Bristol, said people shouldn't underestimate the power of the alcohol companies themselves, keen to capture a younger audience they feared they were losing. 'It's not necessarily that there has been a swing in the pendulum or a return to previous drinking behaviours, it's more that alcohol companies are continually trying to target young people with their products,' she said. 'They are using the current revival and zeitgeist around 00s and 90s culture to design their products to target young people.' There was also a suggestion that gen-Z were simply older – they are now roughly between the ages of 13 and 28 – so those at the older end of the group were more likely to have access to well paid jobs and disposable income. 'I think we're seeing some tailwinds develop,' said Halstead. 'They're getting older so some are probably in better paying, stable jobs and they've got more opportunity perhaps to do things that people with a bit more money like to do, which is go out and buy a drink and not worry too much about how much it costs you.' What many researchers were interested in was whether the characteristics that make gen Z different from their predecessors will stay with them as they age, with evidence suggesting generations become more and more similar as they get older. 'We've always had a question about whether or not the decline [in drinking alcohol] will persist into adulthood,' said Dr Laura Fenton, a research associate at the University of Sheffield who specialises in youth drinking cultures. 'What makes gen-Z slightly distinct as a generation is their attitude towards risk. They've engaged in fewer [risky pursuits] proportionally compared to people their age 20 years ago – and that extends to sex, it extends to driving, it extends to smoking and drug use,' she said. 'I think the question really is, is their approach to risk going to stay intact?'

Dow set to open at record high on rate-cut hopes, UnitedHealth gains
Dow set to open at record high on rate-cut hopes, UnitedHealth gains

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Dow set to open at record high on rate-cut hopes, UnitedHealth gains

Aug 15 (Reuters) - The blue-chip Dow was on track to open at a record high on Friday, underpinned by expectations of an interest rate cut in September and gains in UnitedHealth's shares after Berkshire Hathaway raised its stake in the health insurer. Futures tracking the tech-heavy Nasdaq were slightly off as chip stocks weakened after Applied Materials (AMAT.O), opens new tab warned of weak China demand. UnitedHealth Group (UNH.N), opens new tab jumped 11.5% in premarket trading after Warren Buffett's company (BRKa.N), opens new tab revealed a new investment in the health insurer, while a securities filing showed Michael Burry's Scion Asset Management included bullish positions in the company. Rising costs in the broader healthcare sector and an about 46% slump in heavyweight UnitedHealth's shares this year have left the Dow (.DJI), opens new tab lagging its Wall Street peers on the road to record highs. The price-weighted index last scaled an all-time high on December 4. This week, however, the healthcare sector (.SPXHC), opens new tab is the top performer on the benchmark S&P 500 and is on track for its best weekly performance in three. Other insurers also gained, with Elevance (ELV.N), opens new tab up 4.2%, Centene (CNC.N), opens new tab rising 2.9% and Molina (MOH.N), opens new tab adding 3.7% before the bell on Friday. More broadly, the main U.S. stock indexes are on track for their second week of gains, buoyed by expectations that the Fed could restart its monetary policy easing cycle with a 25-basis-point interest rate cut in September. The central bank last lowered borrowing costs in December and said U.S. tariffs could add to price pressures. However, recent labor market weakness and signs that tariff-induced inflation was yet to reflect in headline consumer prices have made investors confident of a potential dovish move next month. "A 25bps rate cut is still almost fully priced in although it has put a dampener on tentative expectations that the Fed could deliver an even larger 50bps rate cut like last September," analysts at MUFG said in a note. "Market participants are still confident that the Fed will resume rate cuts in response to weakness in the labor market and the lack of pass through so far to consumer prices from higher tariffs as evident in this week's CPI report." At 07:16 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were up 303 points, or 0.67%, S&P 500 E-minis were up 9.25 points, or 0.14%, and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 19.25 points, or 0.08%. Focus will now be on July retail sales data, due later in the day, and the University of Michigan's report on consumer confidence, for clues on the health of the American consumer. Among other stocks, Applied Materials tumbled 14.1% after the chip equipment maker issued weak fourth-quarter forecasts on sluggish China demand, fueling concerns over tariff-related risks. Shares of other chip equipment makers such as KLA (KLAC.O), opens new tab and Lam Research (LRCX.O), opens new tab lost 5.8% and 5%, respectively. Intel (INTC.O), opens new tab rose 2.7% on the heels of a 20% gain this week after a report said the Trump administration was in talks with the struggling chipmaker for the U.S. government to potentially take a stake in the company. On the commodities front, crude prices slipped to around $65 a barrel with attention on a meeting in Alaska between U.S. President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, that markets hope could pave the way for a resolution to the Ukraine conflict. The meeting will take place at 1900 GMT.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store