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Date: | Fri, 24 Mar 2000 11:58:08 -0800 |
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> From: [log in to unmask]
>
> Subject: NNF - Buggy Eggs
>
>
>
> March 24, 2000
> NUTRITION NEWS FOCUS
> "Nutrition news is important. We help you
> understand it!"
>
> Today's Topic: Buggy Eggs
>
> In the 1980s and 1990s, a bacteria called Salmonella
> enteriditis (SE)
> emerged as an important cause of human
> gastrointestinal illness in
> the U.S.; it appears to have been prevalent across
> Europe for years
> before. Most illnesses with SE are due to use of
> raw or undercooked
> eggs.
>
> The real incidence of infection with SE is unknown
> but estimated from
> large outbreaks that occur at meals in restaurants,
> social halls,
> churches, etc. When many people come down with
> severe intestinal
> symptoms, this is often reported to health
> authorities who track down
> the source.
>
> HERE'S WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: Even in infected
> flocks of chickens, the rate of infection of the
> eggs is very low and
> is often less than one in 200 eggs. However,
> getting that one
> infected egg can cause real problems for people
> whose defenses are
> not the best: young children, the elderly, pregnant
> women, and the
> chronically ill. The bacteria are actually
> deposited while the egg
> is forming and are under the shell. Simple
> protection measures are
> storing eggs under refrigeration and cooking them
> thoroughly until
> both yolk and white are firm.
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