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Contaminated Food – Minneapolis How I do what I do!

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Presentation on theme: "Contaminated Food – Minneapolis How I do what I do!"— Presentation transcript:

1 Contaminated Food – Minneapolis How I do what I do!
June 19, 2009 How I do what I do!

2 Real Events Happening Daily to Real People
76 million cases of foodborne illness annually1 325,000 hospitalizations 5,000 deaths Medical costs, productivity losses, costs of premature death costs 6.9 billion dollars a year2 1Mead PS, et al., Food-related illness and death in the United States, Emerg Infect Dis. 5: 2 Buzby, et al. Product Liability and Microbial Foodborne Illness (2001)ERS Agricultural Economic Report No. 799.

3 Marler Clark, LLP PS Since 1993 Marler Clark has represented thousands of legitimate food illness victims in every State. Only a fraction of the victims who contact our office end up being represented. Who do we turn away?

4 “Christening” the Carpet
“I opened a box of Tyson Buffalo wings and saw an unusually shaped piece of chicken and I picked it up.  When I saw that the ‘piece’ had a beak, I got sick to my stomach. My lunch and diet coke came up and I managed to christen my carpet, bedding and clothing. I want them to at least pay for cleaning my carpet etc.” 

5 Lending a Helping Hand “My husband recently opened a bottle of salsa and smelled an unusual odor but chose to eat it regardless, thinking that it was just his nose.  He found what appeared to be a rather large piece of animal or human flesh. He became very nauseated and I feel the manufacturer should be held responsible.

6 How Do We Do It? The Chaff Just like health departments we need
to quickly and reliably recognize unsupportable claims How Do We Do It?

7 Basic Tools of the Trade
Symptoms Incubation Duration Food History Medical Attention Suspected source Others Ill Health Department Involvement

8 Matching Symptoms with Specific Characteristics of Pathogens
E. coli O157:H7 Hepatitis A Salmonella Shigella Campylobacter Vibrio

9 Matching Incubation Periods
Incubation Periods Of Common Pathogens PATHOGEN INCUBATION PERIOD Staphylococcus aureus 1 to 8 hours, typically 2 to 4 hours. Campylobacter 2 to 7 days, typically 3 to 5 days. E. coli O157:H7 1 to 10 days, typically 2 to 5 days. Salmonella 6 to 72 hours, typically hours. Shigella 12 hours to 7 days, typically 1-3 days. Hepatitis A 15 to 50 days, typically days. Listeria 3 to 70 days, typically 21 days. Norovirus 24 to 72 hours, typically 36 hours.

10 Epidemiologic Assessment
Time Place Person association Part of a recognized outbreak?

11 Medical Attention Health care provider Emergency Room Hospitalization

12 Health Department Involvement

13 FOIA/Public Records Request

14 Communicable Disease Investigation
Reportable Disease Case Report Form Enteric/viral laboratory testing results Human specimens Environmental specimens

15 Molecular Testing Results
PFGE PulseNet

16 No. of outbreaks Assoc. with firm/ Total no. of outbreaks
Traceback Records POS A POS B POS C POS D FIRM A FIRM B FIRM C FIRM D FIRM E FIRM G FIRM H FIRM F FIRM I FIRM J FIRM K FIRM L FIRM M FIRM N FIRM O GROWER A GROWER B GROWER D GROWER C No. of outbreaks Assoc. with firm/ Total no. of outbreaks Firm Name Firms A,C,D,G, H,I,L,M,N Growers A&C Firms B,E,F,J,K Firm O, Grower D Grower B 1/4 2/4 3/4 4/4

17 Prior Health Department Inspections
Improper Cooking Procedures Improper Refrigeration Improper Storage and Cooking Procedures Improper Sanitation

18 Improper Cooking Procedures
A young girl suffered HUS after eating a hamburger from a midsized southern California fast-food chain.  Her illness was not culture-confirmed. No food on site tested positive for E. coli O157:H7.  Review of health inspections revealed flaws in cooking methods. Hamburger buns are toasted on the grill immediately adjacent to the cooking patties, and it is conceivable that, early in the cooking process, prior to pasteurization, meat juices and blood containing active pathogens might possibly splash onto a nearby bun.

19 Improper Refrigeration
A Chinese buffet-restaurant in Ohio was the suspected source of an E. coli O157:H7 outbreak. No contaminated leftover food was found.  A number of ill patrons were children. Jell-O was suspected as the vehicle of transmission. Health Department report noted “raw meat stored above the Jell-O in the refrigerator.”  The likely source of E. coli O157:H7 in the Jell-O was from raw meat juices dripping on the Jell-O while it was solidifying in the refrigerator.

20 Improper Storage and Cooking
Banquet-goers in tested positive for Salmonella. Leftover food items had been discarded or tested negative.  Restaurant had “pooled” dozens, if not hundreds, of raw eggs in a single bucket for storage overnight, then used them as a “wash” on a specialty dessert that was not cooked thoroughly. 

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22 Civil Litigation – A Tort – How it Really Works
Strict liability It is their fault – Period! Negligence Did they act reasonably? Punitive damages Did they act with conscious disregard of a known safety risk?

23 Strict Liability for Food – a Bit(e) of History
“… a manufacturer of a food product under modern conditions impliedly warrants his goods… and that warranty is available to all who may be damaged by reason of its use in the legitimate channels of trade…” Mazetti v. Armour & Co., Wash. 622 (1913)

24 Who is a Manufacturer? A “manufacturer” is defined as a “product seller who designs, produces, makes, fabricates, constructs, or remanufactures the relevant product or component part of a product before its sale to a user or consumer….” RCW (2); see also Washburn v. Beatt Equipment Co., 120 Wn.2d 246 (1992)

25 The Legal Standard: Strict Liability
The focus is on the product; not the conduct They are liable if: The product was unsafe The product caused the injury STRICT LIABILITY IS LIABILITY WITHOUT REGARD TO FAULT.

26 It’s called STRICT Liability for a Reason
The only defense is prevention Wishful thinking does not help If they manufacture a product that causes someone to be sick they are going to pay IF they get caught

27 Why Strict Liability? Puts pressure on those (manufacturers) that most likely could correct the problem in the first place Puts the cost of settlements and verdicts directly onto those (manufacturers) that profit from the product Creates incentive not to let it happen again

28 The Legal Arsenal Interrogatories Requests for production
Requests for inspection Request for admission Third-party subpoenas Depositions Motions to compel

29 Litigation At Work – A Bit(e) of History
Jack in the Box Odwalla

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32 The Plaintiff

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34 Benton Franklin Health District
A Real Life Example Benton Franklin Health District OCTOBER 1998 Call from Kennewick General Hospital infection control nurse Call from elementary school principal

35 Preliminary Interviews
Kennewick General Hospital Kennewick Family Medicine Interview tool Knowledge of community Asked questions from answers

36 Case Finding Established communication with area laboratories, hospitals and physicians Notified the Washington State Department of Health Epidemiology office Established case definition early and narrowed later

37 Finley Schools Finley School District K-5 Middle School High School
Rural area Water supply Irrigation water Septic system Buses

38 Epidemiologic Investigation
Classroom schedules Bus schedules Lunch schedules Recess schedules Case-Control Study Cohort Study of Staff Cohort Study of Meals Purchased

39 Environmental Investigation
Playground Equipment Puddles Topography Animals Water system Sewage system

40 Environmental Investigation
Hand Rails Dirty Can Opener Army Worms Stray dogs

41 Environmental Investigation
Kitchen inspection Food prep review Food sample collection Product trace back Central store USDA

42 Results 8 confirmed cases of E. coli O157:H7 3 probable cases
1 secondary case 8 PFGE matches

43 Results Ill students in grades K-5
All but one ill child at a taco meal No other common exposures detected No ill staff members

44 Results Food handling errors were noted in the kitchen
There was evidence of undercooked taco meat No pathogen found in food samples

45 Conclusions Point source outbreak related to exposure at Finley Elementary School A source of infection could not be determined The most probable cause was consuming the ground beef taco

46 The Lawsuit Eleven minor plaintiffs: 10 primary cases, 1 secondary case Parents also party to the lawsuit, individually and as guardians ad litem Two defendants: Finley School District and Northern States Beef

47 The Basic Allegations Students at Finley Elementary School were infected with E. coli O157:H7 as a result of eating contaminated taco meat The E. coli O157:H7 was present in the taco meat because it was undercooked The resulting outbreak seriously injured the plaintiffs, almost killing one of them

48 At Trial: The Plaintiff’s Case
The State and the BFHD conducted a fair and thorough investigation Final report issued by the WDOH concluded the taco meat was the most likely cause of the outbreak The conclusion reached as a result of the investigation was the correct one

49 More of The Plaintiff’s Case
There were serious deficiencies in the District’s foodservice operation There were reasons to doubt the District’s explanation of how the taco meat was prepared The law only requires a 51% probability to prove the outbreak’s cause-in-fact

50 The School District’s Defense
The taco meat was safe to eat because: We love children We are always careful to cook it a lot

51 The Taco Meal Recipe Card
It’s not our fault, someone sold us contaminated beef

52 More of the School District’s Defense
We’ve never poisoned anyone before The health departments botched the investigation and jumped to a hasty conclusion Something else caused the outbreak

53 What Will a Jury Think? A Jury = 12 Consumers

54 What Did This Jury Think?
The investigation was fair and thorough More probably than not, undercooked taco meat caused the children to become ill The School District was ultimately responsible for ensuring the safety of the food it sold to its students

55 In The End After a six week trial, plaintiffs were awarded $4,750,000
The District appealed the verdict on grounds that product liability law did not apply September 2003 the WA State Supreme Court dismissed the District’s case Final award - $6,068,612.85

56 Why These Cases Never Go To Trial


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