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Anatomy of a Recall

By E. coli Lawyer on August 30, 2004

One Case Shows Why it Can Take Weeks
Meat can be recalled days, even weeks, after it has appeared on store shelves — and well past the expiration date. Here, from data provided by the Food Safety and Inspection Service, is an account of one meat recall case this year:
April 5: Michigan state Department of Agriculture notifies the Madison, Wis., district office of E. coli illnesses. The Madison district notifies district enforcement at FSIS headquarters.
April 5-24: FSIS and the state of Michigan conduct an investigation into the illnesses. Investigators work to determine if numerous illnesses were linked and the possible source of the illnesses.
April 24: FSIS requests a sample from a lot of product produced at a plant that was potentially implicated as the source of the outbreak.
April 27: Product from the potentially implicated lot is located and a sample collected.
April 30: Sample sent to FSIS laboratory.
May 1: Sample received by laboratory.
May 5: Sample confirmed positive for E. coli O157:H7. When the positive result was confirmed, the Recall Management Division initiates a product recall.
May 5: Emmpak Foods Inc. of Wisconsin recalls 471,000 pounds of ground beef at the urging of the FSIS.

  • Posted in:
    Food, Drug & Agriculture
  • Blog:
    E. coli Blog
  • Organization:
    Marler Clark, Inc., PS
  • Article: View Original Source

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