RI Company Recalling 1.2 Million Pounds Of Salami
RI Company Recalling 1.2 Million Pounds Of Salami
BURRILLVILLE, R.I. (AP) â A Rhode Island meat company recalled 1.24 million pounds of pepper-coated salami January 23, after officials conducting a months-long, multistate investigation of a salmonella outbreak compared shopping receipts of those who got sick.
The recall by Daniele International Inc comes amid an outbreak thatâs sickened 184 people in 38 states since July.
Daniele has been identified as the source of the ongoing outbreak by William Keene, a senior epidemiologist at the public health division in Oregon, where eight people have gotten sick.
Keene said January 23 that the cause of the sickness was difficult to track and some questions remain, such as whether it was the meat or the pepper that was contaminated.
Public health investigators in Washington state found that many of the stateâs 14 residents who got sick shopped at the warehouse retailer Costco, Keene said.
Costco did not immediately return messages from The Associated Press seeking comment, but it has posted notice of Danieleâs recall on its website.
With permission from the patients, Keene said, investigators compared their shopping records.
âThere was one product that jumped out,â he said: Danieleâs. âThat gave us the focus on salami.â
So, Keene said, investigators reinterviewed people who were thought to be part of the outbreak, such as members of a hunting party from the South who had been to the Great Plains and responded to new questions with answers such as, âNow that you mention it, we did stop at a Walmart in South Dakota and buy some salami.â
But Daniele spokesman Jason Maloni said âthereâs no evidence that points to usâ as the source.
Mr Maloni said 11 people who got sick ate salami from the Daniele Italian Brand Gourmet Pack, but that Rhode Island and federal officials have not linked the companyâs products with the outbreak.
âWeâre taking the prudent step in the event that further evidence does point to us,â he said of the recall. âIt is our responsibility to take this aggressive step.â
In Washington, officials are monitoring the situation, said Tim Church, spokesman for the state Department of Health.
One person from Washington was hospitalized, but all have recovered, Mr Church said.
âWe know investigations have implicated salami nationally, but thatâs really all we know. Thereâs more work that needs to be done on this,â Mr Church said.
Mr Maloni said two of the Danieleâs three plants have been tested and found free of the bacteria. Additional testing is planned.
âOur goal right now is to take prudent, proactive measures to do everything possible to remove any products that do not meet our high standards for quality and taste,â Daniele Incâs vice president of sales, Davide Dukcevich, said in a statement.
The company has set up a hot line for consumers or distributors at 888-345-4160.
Eating food contaminated with salmonella can cause salmonellosis, a potentially life-threatening bacterial foodborne illness.