Maple Leaf cold-cuts confirmed as listeria source in Canada: at least 5 dead, dozens ill
Canwest News Service is first out of the block, citing a senior government official as saying Saturday that testing has confirmed that an outbreak of listeriosis that has claimed at least four lives – and probably several more -- across Canada has now been positively linked to processed meats produced at Maple Leaf Consumer Foods.
Earlier Saturday, the Public Health Agency of Canada upped to 21 the number of cases of a deadly listeriosis outbreak that have been confirmed so far in four provinces. The agency said in a statement that 16 of the cases were found in Ontario, three in British Columbia, and one each in Saskatchewan and in Quebec.
Three deaths in Ontario - St. Catharines, Hamilton and Waterloo - have been officially tied to the deadly strain of the food-borne listeria bacterium, and a fourth death on Vancouver Island has also been attributed to the strain.
The public health agency also said a further 30 suspected cases remain under investigation. Of those, 14 are in Ontario, eight are in Quebec, four are in Alberta and two each are in B.C. and Saskatchewan.
So, with the positive ID, will Canadian politicians and bureaucrats keep smugly bragging about their wonderful system for foodborne disease surveillance?
It’s impossible to tell from the various public statements who became sick when, and whether the system really worked or not. If you’re going to brag about how the system is working, you have to provide dates for onset of illness and deaths. Those dates have not been provided. Take a look at the updates from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control concerning the Salmonella Saintpaul outbreak and compare that with what comes out of various Canadian agencies. There is no comparison.
Tell the public what you know, what you don’t know, and what you’re doing to find out more.
http://barfblog.foodsafety.ksu.edu/admin/trackback/84313






Do you think you will ever get over your bad experience at a Canadian university enough to do a fair comparison between Canadian and US bureaucracies?
PHAC is reporting the number of cases and their locations.
If you look at the CDC reports in the early days of the Salmonella Saintpaul outbreak, the information being provided is comparable (except for a pretty map but surely you're not so superficial that would make a difference). Given that the Salmonella Saintpaul situation has been ongoing for several months, CDC has had plenty of time to document time lines and perhaps PHAC will catch up as the Canadian situation evolves.
The CDC, from the beginning of the Salmonella Saintpaul outbreak, provided ages and onset of illness. No one in Canada has done that yet, so it's difficult to determine if the bragging about surveillance is warranted or not.
dp