Healthy Eating Tips Dodge City KS

Chief Consumer Correspondent Lea Thompson (left) revealed 26 people in three states became ill after eating bagged lettuce. Amber Brister, 11, was hospitalized with kidney failure, requiring dialysis and blood transfusions to clear toxins from her body and fight life-threatening infection.

Dodge City Farmers Market
(620) 227-3936
Wyatt Earp Parking Lot; Between 2nd and 3rd Avenues
Dodge City, KS
Seneca Farmers Market
(785) 336-2294
11th & Elk St.
Seneca, KS
Ark City Farm & Art Market
(620) 442-0230
200 Blcok S. Summit; West side of the street
Arkansas City, KS
Lebo Farmers Market
(620) 256-0122
Broadway
Lebo, KS
New Roots for Refugees
(913) 909-1027
Kansas City, KS
Oberlin Farmers Market
(785) 475-3441
S. Penn St.
Oberlin, KS
LaCrosse Farmers Market
(785) 222-3324
North of the Railroad Tracks on East Side
LaCrosse, KS
Atchison Farmers Market
(913) 833-5450
Between 4th & 6th on Main St.
Atchison, KS
KCK Green Market
(913) 526-0688
6th and Taurome
Kansas City, KS
Lyon Farmers Market
(620) 257-5390
Commercial St.
Lyons, KS
Data Provided by:
 
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Health Hazards of Bagged Salads

Yesterday, I provided a super salad recipe for your Mother’s Day menu. But if you rely on bagged greens when preparing salads, you need to know about a report that recently aired on Dateline NBC.

Chief Consumer Correspondent Lea Thompson (left) revealed 26 people in three states became ill after eating bagged lettuce. Amber Brister, 11, was hospitalized with kidney failure, requiring dialysis and blood transfusions to clear toxins from her body and fight life-threatening infection.

The problem wasn’t limited to Amber, Thompson reported. A 54-year-old man in nearby Minneapolis was sick for several days before being rushed to his local hospital with excruciating pain and hemorrhaging from his colon. Within three days, 10 more cases were reported.

At this point, physicians suspected their patients’ problems were linked to contaminated food. Per protocol, they called in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) for assistance. Experts suspected E. coli 0157:H7 —a bacterium usually associated with eating undercooked ground beef.

The real culprit, however, was bagged salad—the No. 2 cause of E. coli-related foodborne illness. Infection presents with stomach cramps, bloody diarrhea and hemolytic uremic syndrome —the condition that leads to kidney failure. According to MDH, patients typically become ill two to five days after eating contaminated food.

The CDC then issued a warning about bagged salad risks and a voluntar...

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