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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Nasty E. coli strain in Isles

By David Waite
Advertiser Staff Writer

GUARDING AGAINST E. COLI

Wash hands before and after handling food. After handling raw hamburger, scrub under fingernails with antibacterial soap.

Cook ground beef thoroughly. Interior temperatures should reach 160 degrees. If a thermometer is not available, avoid eating hamburger that is still pink inside.

Wash countertops, utensils and especially cutting boards with hot, soapy water after they come in contact with raw meat. Never use the same platter used to carry raw hamburger patties or other raw meat to the stove or grill to carry the cooked meat back to the kitchen or serving area.

Drink only pasteurized milk, juice or cider.

Wash fruits and vegetables thoroughly. Do not serve alfalfa sprouts to children younger than 5, to immuno-compromised people or to the elderly unless the safety of the sprouts can be verified.

People with diarrhea should wash hands carefully, and avoid swimming in public pools, sharing baths with others, and preparing food for others.

Source: State Dept. of Health

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The state Department of Health is advising Hawai'i residents to thoroughly cook hamburgers, wash vegetables thoroughly and take other precautions to reduce the chance of getting sick from food that might contain a particular strain of E. coli bacterium.

Four E. coli cases were reported to the Health Department between Aug. 12 and 16.

State health director Dr. Chiyome Fukino said there was no common thread in the four cases, including the type of food eaten or where the food was purchased.

Three of the cases involved O'ahu residents, while the fourth was a visitor who probably ingested the E. coli-containing food on O'ahu or the Big Island.

Although most strains of E. coli are harmless and can be found living in the intestines of humans, the E. coli 0157:H7 strain associated with the four recent cases produces a powerful toxin and can cause severe illness, Fukino said.

"If you have bloody diarrhea and severe cramping, go to the doctor," Fukino said.

The strain of E. coli that caused the "cluster" of illnesses in Hawai'i earlier this month infected about 73,000 people nationwide last year and resulted in 61 deaths. Fukino said she was not aware of any E. coli-caused deaths in Hawai'i in recent years, but noted that it is sometimes difficult to attribute deaths to E. coli infections because the illness often leads to severe dehydration resulting in kidney failure, which is then listed as the cause of death.

Reach David Waite at dwaite@honoluluadvertiser.com.