Canada: Deadly bacteria linked to some Maple Leaf meats

by Barry Artiste | August 21, 2008 at 04:49 am
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Canada: Deadly bacteria linked to some Maple Leaf meats

Canada: Deadly bacteria linked to some Maple Leaf meats

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Barry Artiste, Now Public Contributor

Now that BBQ season winds down, kids are home from summer camp, sandwiches the mainstay for any child as busy parents scramble to work, may have ill effects for kids, especially the under 10 group left in daycares where sandwiches are the standard fare will be advised to perhaps stick to fruits and veggies and Kraft dinner and soups or fast food for a while until the Listeria scare is over.

Certainly no excuse for a National Company, where sanitation must always be the buzzword in  protecting consumer before the fact and not after.

Perhaps the almighty dollar, and cost saving measures to remain competitive maybe a death knell to any company who puts corporate profit over consumer safety. 

I am not saying this is what Maple Leaf is doing , but surely sanitation must be practised vigilantly many times a day. I feel perhaps it was not as the list below of all the different assembly line of meats shown, with the different expiry dates, running on different areas of the plant certainly seems that sanitation was not the mantra of this company. 

Cross contamination of different types of meat is apparent from this list, leaving me to believe each line of meat after processing was done that the assembly lines and process equipment were not santized before each type of meat was introduced to the areas to be processed.  Certainly one of the reasons I frequent Kosher Deli's or local butcher shops whenever I can.
 

http://www.ottawasun.com/News/National/2008/08/21/pf-6521336.html

August 21, 2008

Deadly bacteria linked to some Maple Leaf meats Toronto plant closed due to listeria;

 By THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO -- The temporary shutdown of a Maple Leaf Foods plant that produced meats linked to a countrywide outbreak of listeriosis shines a spotlight on the big food processor.

The Toronto company, formed years ago from the merger of Maple Leaf Mills and Canada Packers, has shut down the Toronto plant for several days as part of a precautionary $2-million recall of prepared meats being investigated as the possible source of a potentially deadly listeria bacteria.

The outbreak has killed at least one person and sickened at least 16 others.

The complete list of affected products, including individual product codes and best-before dates, is as follows:

* 26365, Sliced Cooked Turkey Breast, 470 grams, Sept. 30;

* 02106, Schneiders Bavarian Smokies, 1 kilogram, Oct. 28;

* 02126, Schneiders Cheddar Smokies, 1 kilogram, Oct. 28;

* 21333, Sure Slice Roast Beef, 1 kilogram, Sept. 30;

* 21388, Sure Slice Combo Pack, 1 kilogram, Sept. 30;

* 60243, Deli Gourmet Roast Beef slices, 1 kilogram, Sept. 30;

* 02356, Seasoned Cooked Roast Beef, 500 grams, Oct. 7;

* 42706, Roast Beef, Seasoned and Cooked, 500 grams, Oct. 7;

* 21334,Sure Slice Turkey Breast Roast, 1 kilogram, Oct. 14;

* 21444, Sure Slice Corned Beef, 1 kilogram, Oct. 14;

* 44938, Montreal Style Corned Beef, 500 grams, Oct. 14;

* 21440, Sure Slice Black Forest Style Ham, 1 kilogram, Oct. 21;

* 21447, Sure Slice Salami, 1 kilogram, Oct. 21; * 21331, Sure Slice Smoked Ham, 1 kilogram, Oct. 21;

* 48019, Schneiders Deli Shaved Corned Beef, 200 grams, Oct. 21;

* 48020, Schneiders Deli Shaved Smoked Meat, 200 grams, Oct. 21; * 48016, Schneiders Deli Shaved Smoked Ham , 200 grams, Oct. 21;

* 48018, Schneiders Deli Shaved Smoked Turkey Breast, 150 grams, Oct. 21;

* 48017, Schneiders Deli Shaved Fully Cooked Smoked Honey Ham, 200 grams, Oct. 21;

* 21360, Burns Bites Pepperoni, 500 grams, Jan. 21, 2009;

* 99158, Turkey Breast Roast, 1 kilogram, Sept. 30;

* 71330, Roast Beef Cooked, Seasoned, 2.5 kilograms, Sept. 30;

* 71331 Corned Beef, Smoked Meat, 2.5 kilograms, Sept. 30.

FACTS ABOUT LISTERIA INFECTION

# - WHAT IS IT?:

The bacterium called Listeria monocytogenes, often found in soil, vegetation, animal feed and feces, can cause the disease listeriosis in humans who eat food contaminated with it.

# - WHERE IT'S FOUND: In vegetables contaminated by soil or manure used as fertilizer; infected animals can contaminate meat; unpasteurized milk may contain listeria, and certain processed foods like soft cheeses, deli meats and hot dogs can become contaminated after processing.

# - SYMPTOMS: Nausea, vomiting, cramps, diarrhea, headache, constipation, persistent fever. If it spreads to the nervous system, signs and symptoms may include headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance, convulsions. In newborn babies who have been infected, signs include loss of appetite, lethargy, jaundice, vomiting, skin rash, breathing difficulty.

# - TIMELINE: Symptoms usually appear within two to 30 days, and up to 90 days after consuming contaminated food, according to Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

Average incubation period is three weeks, says Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
Paschen
Paschen
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:10 on August 21st, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff.


Hum! That could be devastating! Maple leaf is next to the only meat processor left in Canada holding almost a monopole!

0
Barry Artiste

Thanks PAschen, on a large commercial scale, yes they have a monopoly, but there are many small commercial and local ones for the consumer to deal with. Best for consumers to check the CFIA website for updates on companies, especially those fined for unsanitary conditions.  Thanks for the comments and flag.


http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/toce.shtml

0
Paschen

Yes, you may be right, however do you have any idea how many farmers are being contracted and dead locked by them? Those farmers would be dead in the water now and ruined as well.

ppeggy
ppeggy
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:28 on August 21st, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
Barry Artiste

Thanks Moon and Peggy for the comments and flag, certainly you are right Moon, perhaps a boycott is in order,

amyjudd
amyjudd
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:47 on August 21st, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Horrible - I'm just glad I don't eat processed meat really because this is really scary.

0
Barry Artiste

Thanks AMy for the comments and the flag, I too avoid processed anything if I can help it.



SOLARLIFE
SOLARLIFE
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:57 on August 21st, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
Barry Artiste

Thanks Solar for stopping by and the flag




0
Frank Fortune

Standards in Canada have been on the slide since the mid-90s. Slash-and-burn crooks like Mike Harris, former conservative premier of Ontario, dropped the number of food inspectors and it shows! Canada, which once had a reputation for being clean and healthy - a Swiss USA if you will - is now populated by over-weight donut eaters and judging from the number of hygiene scandals, companies that can't do the basic duty of sanitation.

0
Hum Dinger

Remember: this is the same country who forgot to notice a pig farmer in BC was putting prostitutes in the sausages, rather than pigs. Is there anyone left in Canada who, like, inspects things, ever?

0
Barry Artiste

Thanks Frank and Hum for the comments, you are both correct  on all counts, you're comments are welcome anytime .

Barbara McPherson
Barbara McPherson
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:22 on August 25th, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff.  These large, centralized plants simply magnify the hygiene problems.  Look to what happened in the UK.  If killing floors and processing plants stayed small, the spread of mad cow and foot and mouth disease would not have become a massive problem.

0
Barry Artiste

Thanks Barbara for the comments and flag, what you say is Bang On, , hence why I swear off processed meats and buy only from my neighbourhood butcher, who I trust, and he feeds his family the same meat he sells me.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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