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For immediate release: May 27, 2010 (10-087)
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E. coli update: new illnesses point out potential raw milk hazards
OLYMPIA
¾ Two recent infections with toxin-producing
E. coli (E. coli O157) have been
identified in Washington residents who drank raw, unpasteurized milk. The two
cases confirmed this month bring the count of infections this year associated
with one Bellingham dairy to eight.
Although it’s legal to buy and sell raw milk in Washington, the state departments of Health and Agriculture (WSDA) remind consumers that raw milk can be dangerous.
The two new patients say they drank raw milk produced by Jackie’s Jersey Milk in Whatcom County. WSDA has conducted additional testing of the firm’s product, but has not found E. coli in the milk. WSDA continues to work with the farm to review the dairy's production and product handling practices.
The firm issued a product recall notice in February after WSDA found
E. coli during routine sampling of the
farm’s raw milk. Soon after the February recall, six patients with
E. coli infections reported drinking
the dairy’s product. People who were sick said they got the milk at retail
stores in King, Snohomish, and Skagit counties.
Raw milk isn’t heated to kill harmful bacteria, making it riskier than
pasteurized milk. Pasteurization kills illness-causing bacteria. Raw milk can
also contain other bacteria that can cause illness or threaten lives, including
Salmonella,
Campylobacter, and
Listeria.
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