Latest news with #butchershops


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Health
- Fox News
Butcher shops close as E. coli outbreak kills 12-year-old girl, hospitalizes 21 children
A 12-year-old girl died and at least 21 children were hospitalized after an E. coli outbreak that was likely caused by contaminated meat, prompting the closure of six butcher shops in France, officials said. Signs of severe food poisoning, including bloody diarrhea, first emerged on June 12 near the city of Saint-Quentin in northern France. In total, 22 children and one elderly person have been treated and 10 of the patients were still hospitalized as of Wednesday, according to officials in the Hauts-de-France region. The girl died on Monday, June 16. "I would like to express my deepest sympathy and solidarity with the family of the deceased girl," Health Minister Yannick Neuder said in a post Sunday on X. "To her loved ones, I extend, on behalf of the French government, my most sincere thoughts." Initial tests determined the outbreak was caused by E. coli likely from meat consumption, he told Radio France Internationale (RFI). Nine of the patients developed hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), a rare condition caused by a certain type of E. coli bacteria, according to a news release from the local prefect's office on Wednesday. E. coli is a type of bacterium found in the environment, foods and intestines of people and animals, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). While most varieties of E. coli are harmless, some strains, which can be contracted through contaminated food and water, can cause severe cramps, diarrhea and vomiting. One serious strain is Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC), which can lead to HUS, typically among children and the elderly, and cause kidney failure, permanent health problems — even death. About eight in 10 children with HUS have a STEC infection, according to the CDC. There have been 1,624 HUS cases and 38 deaths from it in the U.S. in recent decades, according to the CDC's most recent data, which spans from 1997 to 2021. Some of the hospitalized patients in France received dialysis, which filters waste and excess fluid when the kidneys are not functioning. "Once somebody has the symptoms of hemolytic uremic syndrome, there's really no therapy other than supportive care," said Dr. Jeffrey Kahn, the chief of pediatric infectious disease at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. "Antibiotics are not going to work. We don't have an antidote." "The way to keep these outbreaks under wraps, or at least to halt the progression, is a robust public health system." Kahn, who is not involved in the care of the patients in France, called HUS a "nasty" disease and said he has seen children receive kidney transplants and come into renal failure as a result of it. It has spread in the U.S. as a result of chopped meat and apple cider, he noted. "The way to keep these outbreaks under wraps, or at least to halt the progression, is a robust public health system," Kahn added. "The investigators are key." Investigations by several government offices into the origins of the outbreak in France are ongoing, according to the prefect's office, and test samples from six Saint-Quentin-area butcher shops, which have been preemptively closed, are expected to open next week. The poisoned individuals had eaten meat traced back to the six shops, according to preliminary investigations. "As part of these investigations, all leads are being explored, analyzed and reported back to ensure that no possible source of contamination is ruled out," the prefect's office stated. Neuder urged people not to panic. "The idea is not to cause panic," he told RFI. "It is still possible to eat meat." Fox News Digital reached out to the health minister's office for comment. For more Lifestyle articles, visit Officials reminded residents that symptoms linked to E. coli can appear within 10 days of eating contaminated food. They cautioned that meat from some of the butchers had been served at two sporting events and a school fair as recently as June 22. They additionally warned people not to consume meat bought from those butchers after June 1, to clean their refrigerators thoroughly if they have purchased any and to prevent transmission by handwashing. "The good news is, there's a lot we can do in the kitchen to help prevent E. coli infections and lower the risk of HUS," Jessica Gavin, a certified food and culinary scientist from California, told Fox News Digital. "I always make sure to cook meat, especially ground beef and poultry, to at least 160 degrees Fahrenheit, wash my hands well after handling raw ingredients and keep raw and cooked foods separate to avoid cross-contamination."


CBS News
4 days ago
- Health
- CBS News
Girl dies from food poisoning, 7 others sickened after eating meat from butcher shops in France
Two butcher shops in northern France have temporarily closed after a child died from severe food poisoning, said local authorities on Friday. Eight children have come down with severe food poisoning since June 12 after consuming meat products from the two businesses in the northern city of Saint-Quentin. Five of them contracted a rare foodborne illness called hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), including a 12-year-old girl who died. HUS in most cases occurs after someone ingests commonly found in the gut of humans and warm-blooded animals. HUS can lead to kidney failure, permanent health problems and even death, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is "impossible at this stage to confirm that the consumption of products from these two establishments is the source of the contamination," local authorities said. But the children all consumed meat or meat products from these two butchers a few days before symptoms appeared, it said. Authorities have closed the two shops as a precautionary measure while samples from both stores are tested. The authorities said they should have the results "early next week" and an investigation has been launched into where the meat came from. HUS affects between 100 and 165 children in France each year, according to the country's public health agency. E. coli outbreaks have also made headlines recently in the U.S. Earlier this month, the Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service announced that ground beef that was distributed nationwide may be contaminated with E. coli. In November, a carrot recall was issued by California grower Grimmway Farms after nearly 40 cases were recorded in 18 states. At least 15 people were hospitalized and one person died, the CDC said. The month before that, an outbreak linked to McDonald's Quarter Pounders killed one person in Colorado and affected at least 104 people across 14 states, according to the CDC.