Missouri: 90 E. coli Cases Tied to Rockwood Summit HS Events [View all]
More than 90 cases of E. coli have been linked to Rockwood Summit High School events in St Louis County, Missouri.
The St. Louis County Health Department said 94 cases have been identified. Some of those cases have been confirmed; others show compatible symptoms and links to confirmed cases.
Health authorities said the cases are allegedly connected to Andres Banquet and Catering which catered some events for Rockwood Summit High School.
The St. Louis County Health Department suggests that salad is the source of illness, but a specific ingredient has not been identified.
One lawsuit has been filed against the catering company on behalf of a cheerleader at Rockwood Summit High School.
The owner of Andres Banquets and Catering said the lawsuit has no merit. He said vendors spot-check produce loads daily, are USDA-inspected and follow strict food safety guidelines. He also claimed that the fact that three students who arent Rockwood Summit High School students were infected is proof his business is not the source of the outbreak.
State and local health department workers were at the catering business to take samples of food for testing. Health department officials will also use genetic testing on stool samples to get more certainty on the outbreak.
An E. coli outbreak in 18 states that involves organic carrots is not linked to this incident.
E. coli are germs called bacteria and are found in many places, including in the environment, foods, water, and the intestines of people and animals. Most E. coli are harmless and are part of a healthy intestinal tract. E. coli helps humans digest food, produce vitamins, and protect people from harmful germs.
But some E. coli can make people sick with diarrhea, urinary tract infections, pneumonia, sepsis, and other illnesses.
Sources:
https://www.firstalert4.com/2024/11/18/more-e-coli-cases-tied-rockwood-school-events/
https://www.cdc.gov/ecoli/about/index.html