June 23 CDC: 613 persons in 33 states, DC - April 10 to June 13 onset
TK: The CDC changed their outbreak map, and I have to give props to Jim Prevor over at the Produce Pundit, who had suggested in one of his earlier posts that the FDA revise their maps to make them more representative of the number of victims in each state. From the CDC's June 23 update:
Since April, 613 persons infected with Salmonella Saintpaul with the same genetic fingerprint have been identified in 33 states and the District of Columbia. These were identified because clinical laboratories in all states send Salmonella strains from ill persons to their State public health laboratory for characterization. The marked increase in reported ill persons since the last update is not thought to be due to a large number of new infections. The number of reported ill persons increased mainly because some states improved surveillance for Salmonella in response to this outbreak and because laboratory identification of many previously submitted strains was completed. In particular, one new state, Massachusetts reported ill persons. The number of ill persons identified in each state is as follows: Arkansas (3 persons), Arizona (34), California (8), Colorado (4), Connecticut (4), Florida (1), Georgia (14), Idaho (3), Illinois (45), Indiana (9), Kansas (9), Kentucky (1), Maryland (18), Massachusetts (12), Michigan (4), Missouri (12), New Hampshire (1), New Jersey (1), New Mexico (79), New York (18), North Carolina (1), Ohio (3), Oklahoma (17), Oregon (5), Pennsylvania (5), Rhode Island (2), Tennessee (4), Texas (265), Utah (2), Virginia (21), Vermont (1), Washington (1), Wisconsin (5), and the District of Columbia (1). Among the 316 persons with information available, illnesses began between April 10 and June 13, 2008.
Labels: FDA, Jim Prevor, tomatoes and salmonella
1 Comments:
Good idea, Tom. If the FDA did it that way, Texas would be the size of the Western United States.
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home