Student

  • Posted: November 29th, 2011 - 5:12am by Doug Powell

    Health-types have reported a suspected case of hepatitis A in a student living in Maritime Hall in the University of Guelph’s South Residence (that's in Canada).

    They say the risk of infection is low, however, as a precaution, Public Health is notifying students that live in the affected residence and asking them to be immunized at a special clinic to be offered at Student Health Services. Vaccination within two weeks of exposure may help prevent illness from the virus.

    Did that student work in food service in any capacity, on-campus or off?

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  • Posted: October 8th, 2011 - 4:27am by Doug Powell

    A student who attends Glacial Drumlin School, the middle school in the Monona Grove School District, was diagnosed and treated for E. coli, a Public Health Madison and Dane County spokesman said Friday.

    Spokesman Jeff Golden said it appeared to be an "isolated case."

    The student's sibling also exhibited symptoms, but the infection had not been confirmed, Golden said.

    Principal Renee Tennant said the cases were not school-related, but parents were notified as a precaution.

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    E. coli  |  0 Comments
    e. coli, Illness, student, Wisconsin
  • Posted: June 20th, 2011 - 7:44am by Doug Powell

    French and Italian media are reporting that 46 young American students were
    hospitalized in Salerno, south of Naples, for food poisoning after eating pasta and meat.

    Young people and a teacher of 32 years, who had to travel in Greece, were hospitalized in various establishments in the vicinity of Salerno on Saturday night after complaining of fever, vomiting and diarrhea.

    The group made a stop for lunch at a self-service Hydromania water park on the outskirts of Rome. They ate cold pasta and chicken thawed. But none of the 170 other guests had suffered the same problems as American students. 


    
A group of Nas, the carabinieri unit that specializes in food control, collected samples of the food consumed by the young Americans for laboratory analysis.
     

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  • Posted: April 16th, 2011 - 11:52am by Doug Powell

    One of the cornerstones of ethics and social responsibility, but one that is rarely discussed, is don’t make people barf.

    With an Alanis Morissette level of ironical irony, a number of Indiana State University students and employees reported having flu-like symptoms after consuming food they ate at the April 4 Ethics and Social Responsibility Conference at ISU.

    ISU food service providers are denying that contaminated food is to blame.

    Conference attendees were served box lunches of cold cut sandwiches, a fruit cup, a pickle and a bag of potato chips.

    The Indiana Statesman contacted one of the event's Scott College of Business student organizers who was instructed not to speak on the record about reports of illness linked to the conference.

    But College of Business Associate Dean Bruce McLaren said he received reports on April 5 of attendees having become ill following the conference. McLaren said he knew of multiple students and faculty who became ill. After receiving those reports, he notified Sodexo, he said.

    According to a statement issued April 12 by Sodexo public relations director Monica Zimmer, "Sodexo was notified about alleged foodborne illness at Indiana State University. We have reviewed our procedures and are confident they are in line with our stringent food safety standards."

    "The health department completed three inspections in the Hulman Memorial Student Union this week and found no violations. In addition, Sodexo received a food safety score of 99% during a recent inspection by a third-party auditor."

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  • Posted: May 22nd, 2010 - 12:24pm by Doug Powell

    A student at Haddon Township High School in South Jersey – always Jersey – discretely defecated into a classmate's soda on March 29, 2010, and once the victim unwittingly took a drink, students in the classroom erupted in laughter.

    Jason Laughlin, a spokesman for the Camden County Prosecutor's Office told the Philadelphia Daily News that when a teacher found out the next day, the accused 17-year-old was charged with aggravated assault and tampering with a food product.

    The accused, a standout wrestler (is this The Breakfast Club?), was not identified because of his age. His mother said the incident was being "blown out of proportion" and declined to comment further. His father is a physical-education teacher in the district.

    The suspect has a scheduled hearing Thursday in Camden County Superior Court, Laughlin said.

     

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