Salmonella
prompts peanut butter recall in Ohio
By KANTELE FRANKO, Associated
Press Writer Kantele Franko, Associated Press
Writer – 3 mins ago
COLUMBUS,
Ohio – An Ohio distributor says
it has recalled two brands of its peanut butter after an open container
tested positive for salmonella bacteria.
There was no immediate indication whether the brands were
linked to a national salmonella outbreak.
King Nut Companies said in a statement issued Saturday
that it has asked customers to stop distributing all peanut butter under its
King Nut and Parnell's Pride brands with a lot code that begins with the
numeral "8." The brands are distributed only through food service
providers and are not sold directly to consumers.
Preliminary laboratory testing found salmonella bacteria
in a 5-pound container of King Nut brand creamy peanut butter, the Minnesota Department of Health
said Friday.
The Minnesota
tests had not linked it to the type of salmonella in the outbreak that has
sickened almost 400 people in 42 states, but the department said additional
results are expected early next week.
"We are taking immediate and voluntary action because
the health and safety of those who use our products is always our highest
priority," King Nut's president, Martin Kanan, said in a release.
King Nut, based in Solon, Ohio,
has canceled all orders with the manufacturer of its two peanut butter
brands, Peanut Corporation
of America,
based in Lynchburg,
Va.
Peanut Corporation
said in a statement posted on its Web site that it is working with federal
food and health officials to determine whether its products are connected to
the national outbreak. PCA does not sell its products at grocery stores or
directly to the public.
The Lynchburg
company said the tainted container was found in the kitchen of a nursing
facility, leaving it open to the possibility of cross-contamination from
another source. The company did not say where the nursing facility was
located or when the contaminated product was discovered.
Peanut Corporation's owner and president, Stewart Parnell,
declined to comment further on Sunday until the Federal Drug Administration
and the U.S. Center for
Disease Control and Prevention complete their investigation.
CDC spokeswoman Bernadette Burden said Sunday that she had
no new information on the case and did not know when additional test results
would be available.
The CDC
said Friday that 399 cases had been confirmed nationally, with about one in
five of victims hospitalized. California has reported the most
cases, with 55, followed by Ohio
with 53. All the illnesses began between Sept. 3 and Dec. 29, but most of the
people grew sick after Oct. 1.
The CDD has not confirmed any deaths associated with the
outbreak.
The report of peanut butter contamination comes almost two
years after ConAgra
recalled its Peter Pan brand peanut butter, which was eventually linked to at
least 625 salmonella cases in 47 states.
CDC officials say the bacteria in the current outbreak has
been genetically fingerprinted as the Typhimurium type, which is among the
most common sources of salmonella
food poisoning.
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