Ottawa, Dec 25 : Grocery chain Loblaw Companies has
recalled two more frozen beef products because of possible contamination from E.
coli bacteria.
The affected products are Butcher's Choice Hickory
Barbecue Beef Burgers with best-before dates of Feb. 1 and Feb. 10
The
company earlier recalled Butcher's Choice Garlic Peppercorn Beef Burgers with a
best-before date of March 3.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says it
is monitoring the recalls, which were prompted by four case of E. coli
infection.
Public Health officials notified the CFIA last week that the
E. coli cases could possibly be linked to a food source, which prompted the
investigation into the meat.
It's not yet known, however, whether the E.
coli strain responsible for the illnesses is the same as the one found in the
meat.
Officials said they were also inspecting Cardinal Meat Specialist
Ltd., the facility where the burgers were produced.
"An initial review of
inspection reports and company documentation has not identified any issues with
the facility's E. coli O157 control measures and the company currently has no
outstanding corrective action requests," said Garfield Balsom, a food safety
recall specialist with the agency said.
There is a possibility that
additional products could be identified and the recall could
expand.
"There is good evidence these four cases are linked to some kind
of common source, (but) we don't yet know what that common source is," said Dr.
Frank Plummer, chief science officer at the Public Health Agency of Canada's
national microbiology laboratory.
"Possibly the hamburgers, but we're
not sure at this point. "
E. coli O157:H7 is potentially deadly. Health
officials say it can cause bloody diarrhea, dehydration and, in the most severe
cases, kidney failure.
The cases identified in this investigation do not
share the same genetic fingerprint as those from an outbreak earlier this year
that led to a massive international beef recall, said Dr. Gregory Taylor with
the Public Health Agency of Canada.
"To put it clearly, this means that
these cases are not linked to the XL Foods investigation," he said.
In
September, Canadian authorities were notified by their U.S. counterparts that
beef from the XL Foods plant in Alberta was testing positive for E.
coli.
It took the CFIA nearly two weeks after that to begin notifying the
public about the products and more than eight recalls were eventually issued
covering over 200 products.
The plant's license was also temporarily
suspended for failing to comply with food safety measures.
The company
resumed operations in late October but was only allowed to resume exports to the
United States earlier this month.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Cases of illness linked to E. coli prompt recall of frozen hamburgers
Cases of illness linked to E. coli prompt recall of frozen hamburgers
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