logo
Salami being recalled due to Salmonella outbreak

Salami being recalled due to Salmonella outbreak

CTV Newsa day ago

Salami sold in Alberta is being recalled due to a Salmonella outbreak. (Supplied)
Some brands of salami are being recalled due to a salmonella outbreak in Alberta.
There are currently 44 confirmed cases in the province. The recall also affects Ontario, which has 13 confirmed cases as of Wednesday afternoon.
The brands being recalled in the two provinces are:
Rea brand Genoa Salami Sweet;
Rea brand Genoa Salami Hot; and
Bona brand Mild Genova Salami.
According to officials, the salami may have been sold in sandwiches from deli counters and the product was distributed to grocery stores, specialty markets, restaurants, cafes, delis, and butcher shops.
Recalled items should not be consumed and should be thrown out or returned to where they were purchased.
Symptoms of salmonellosis develop six to 72 hours after eating products infected with the bacteria and can include chills, fever, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting and stomach cramps.
Most people will recover on their own but a serious illness may require treatment at a hospital, or lead to long-lasting health effects or death.
An outbreak investigation is ongoing. Updates and more information can be found online.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boil water advisory issued for Tsiigehtchic, N.W.T.
Boil water advisory issued for Tsiigehtchic, N.W.T.

CBC

time44 minutes ago

  • CBC

Boil water advisory issued for Tsiigehtchic, N.W.T.

Social Sharing Residents in Tsiigehtchic, N.W.T., are being advised to boil their tap water for at least one minute before using. In a public health advisory Thursday afternoon, the office of the chief public health officer says there is higher than normal turbidity, or muddiness, in the water and the advisory is just a precaution. The advisory says there have been no reported illnesses associated with drinking the water in the community. Officials say residents should boil any water being used for drinking, preparing food, hot and cold beverages, ice cubes, washing produce, brushing teeth or other dental hygiene, and for infant formulas. Bathing, showering and washing hands with tap water is OK but residents should avoid swallowing the water. Tsiigehtchic residents could also use bottled water or water that's been distilled or treated by reverse osmosis but filters like Brita, which use activated carbon filters, are not considered safe to treat water during the advisory period. Residents should also avoid drinking from public fountains. A notice from the hamlet, posted to the community's Facebook page, says there's an issue with the water treatment plant and that water will be trucked in from Fort McPherson, about 60 kilometres away, starting Friday. The hamlet wrote that five truckloads are required to service the community and although water delivery schedules will remain the same, residents are asked to try and conserve. The territory's chief environmental health officer, in collaboration with the community government, will continue to monitor the situation and will provide formal notice to lift the boil water advisory. The hamlet said it would update the community when plant maintenance is complete.

Additional lead testing happening at Yellowknife schools this week
Additional lead testing happening at Yellowknife schools this week

CBC

time44 minutes ago

  • CBC

Additional lead testing happening at Yellowknife schools this week

An additional round of lead testing is taking place at two Yellowknife schools this week. École William McDonald Middle School was having its drinking water tested Thursday and Range Lake North School will be tested Friday, according to a news release from the Yellowknife Education District No. 1. Late last month, the school district notified parents and staff about high levels of lead in the water at the two schools. However, the territorial government later cast doubt on those results, saying the initial testing process didn't follow protocol, and that it didn't consult its own experts on water testing or any outside experts. The Yellowknife Education District No. 1 said in its news release on Wednesday that the sampling taking place at the two schools this week aligns with protocols approved by the office of the chief public health officer, and Health Canada standards. The testing will be done by Stantec Consulting Ltd. "Once the test results have been received and reviewed, we will share further information with school staff, students, and families," wrote Shirley Zouboules, superintendent for Yellowknife Education District No. 1. In the meantime, the education district says the two schools are still using alternative water sources. The previous tests showed lead levels in École William McDonald's drinking water were detected at 0.00903 milligrams per litre, while Range Lake School's levels were 0.025 milligrams per litre. Canada's drinking water guidelines state the maximum acceptable level is 0.005 milligrams per litre. Two weeks ago, in an emailed response to questions from CBC News, the education department said nearly all the territory's schools have either had or are having lead testing done, with the exception of Įtłʼǫ̀ School in Yellowknife, Chief Albert Wright School in Tulit'a and Chief T'Selehye School in Fort Good Hope. Those three schools are not being tested because they are newer buildings and construction standards changed before they were built.

Jury makes 22 recommendations in coroner's inquest into death of Windsor man at local jail
Jury makes 22 recommendations in coroner's inquest into death of Windsor man at local jail

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Jury makes 22 recommendations in coroner's inquest into death of Windsor man at local jail

The jury in a coroner's inquest tasked with examining the fatal overdose of a Windsor father of two at a troubled local jail delivered its verdict Thursday, issuing nearly two-dozen recommendations aimed at preventing similar deaths. Joseph Gratton, 31 at the time, died of fentanyl toxicity after overdosing at the South West Detention Centre nearly six years ago, the five-person jury confirmed. Gratton, who was in custody awaiting court proceedings, was confirmed dead at a local hospital just after midnight on Oct. 30, 2019. The five-person jury deliberated behind closed doors for nearly six hours before delivering a verdict and 22 non-binding recommendations to the Ontario government. The first two were related to improving staffing at the provincial facility, which has for years been plagued by overcrowding and understaffing concerns. Five inmates, including Gratton, overdosed over a roughly two-week period at the time, which the union representing jail staff attributed to a lack of resources. The inquest jury said the Ministry of the Solicitor General, which oversees corrections in Ontario, should "identify and address the number of unfilled staffing positions in healthcare" within the entire system, and "take additional measures to attract and maintain staff." The Windsor facility, specifically, should review staffing levels to make sure that a medical professional is always available to assess inmates "in a timely manner," the jury said. The inquest heard earlier in the week that Gratton's cell mate had been sick and vomited three hours before both men were found unconscious on the floor. But the cell mate, Blake Carter, told a nurse and correctional officer doing a standard medication round that he had just eaten something bad. The nurse and officer accepted Carter's reasoning, gave him Gravol, and continued on with their round. The nurse, who no longer works at the jail, testified earlier in the inquest that she remembers "being very short-staffed" on night shifts and having a "very heavy client load." If she'd had more time, she probably would have dug deeper into Carter's symptoms, she said. Carter, who survived that night but has since died, later told a correctional officer that he and Gratton had been doing fentanyl throughout the day. Other recommendations included making sure that medical staff handle inmate requests promptly, and that those who say they are experiencing opioid withdrawal symptoms are quickly assessed for potential treatment. On day two of the inquest, which began Monday, the jury learned that Gratton had made multiple requests for a drug that treats opioid addiction in the weeks before his death. A nurse practitioner denied Gratton's request for suboxone eight days before he overdosed on fentanyl. That nurse practitioner, who saw 20 to 30 patients per day as the jail's only person in that role at the time, said she was worried Gratton might misuse suboxone because he had a history of hoarding his prescription medication. She also testified that she lacked enough evidence to prescribe him the drug, which can be harmful to those who abuse or don't need it. The jury's recommendations addressed issues that likely slowed the jail staff's response to Gratton and Carter's overdose as well. Video and testimony from the inquest revealed that the officer who first discovered Gratton and Carter unresponsive at around 11 p.m. did not have the keys to open the cell when a supervisor arrived to assist. The officer who did have the keys had been doing earlier rounds, but had just gone on break. The province needs to make sure that all officers supervising a unit have keys and radios on them at all times, the jury said. The inquest also heard that the officer who first saw Gratton and Carter on the ground of their cell had previously alleged that Gratton had threatened her, leading to a police investigation. That correctional officer was working an overtime shift, and wasn't usually assigned to the behavioural unit where Gratton was housed at the time. It's unclear what came of the police probe, but the jury said the province should "ensure that correctional staff who are complainants in criminal investigations in relation to a particular inmate not be deployed to supervise" their unit. Other recommendations included "continuously upgrading equipment" to help jail staff stop illicit drugs from getting into the building. The provincial government has said it will publicly share the jury's full findings and recommendations. The inquest heard that the correctional service and South West Detention Centre have already made several changes in response to Gratton's death.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store