READINGTON – A township woman has sued involving the existing E. coli breakout that originated with Romaine lettuce grown in Yuma, Arizona.
A Seattle law office that focuses on food safety issues filed a suit on the part of Louise Fraser, of Readington, who claimed she?consumed the tainted chopped lettuce in?a salad she ordered on the Panera on Route 202 on March 20. 72 hrs later she did start to experience bloody diarrhea and was hospitalized that has a kind of kidney failure called hemolytic uremic syndrome.
Fraser received multiple blood transfusions?before she was launched on April 5. She is now recovering at your house.
The U.S. Cdc and Prevention said all Romaine lettuce, including salads and salad mixes, needs to be discarded irrespective of where in the us it was actually purchased. Restaurant customers should ask the origin from the lettuce before eating it. Folks who wants what is cause of the romaine lettuce, wait to purchase it or eat it, the CDC advised.
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No common grower, supplier, distributor or brand is identified by the CDC. The U.S. Centers for disease control and Prevention said all Romaine lettuce, including salads and salad mixes, should be removed you reside in america it absolutely was purchased. Restaurant customers should ask the foundation from the lettuce before eating it. If you’re unable to confirm the cause of the romaine lettuce, wait to purchase it or eat it, the CDC advised.
The Nj-new jersey Department of Health said you’ll find seven cases of E. coli reported in New Jersey. Four cases?were?reported in Hunterdon County with single cases in Monmouth, Sussex and Somerset counties. The Department of Health couldn’t identify any source to the contamination and said it was counting on the "food history" of them affected.
Panera could not return some text for comment Tuesday afternoon.
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Additional tests are ongoing to ascertain if additional cases match the multi-state outbreak.
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