humans get sick from touching dog treats

    • Gold Top Dog

    humans get sick from touching dog treats

    I saw this on another board I go on...
     
    Handling Pet Treats Can Cause Human Ills
    By Steven Reinberg
    HealthDay Reporter

    Source of Article: [linkhttp://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=62737]http://www.medicinenet.com/script/ma...ticlekey=62737[/link]

    THURSDAY, June 29 (HealthDay News) -- Pets always welcome treats, but their owners may be putting themselves at risk of developing salmonella infection by handling beef or seafood snacks contaminated with the bacteria.

    So warned the authors of a report issued Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    The CDC study outlined nine cases of pet owners becoming sick with a specific type of infection, called Salmonella Thompson, in 2004 and 2005, after handling pet treats from two different manufacturers, one in the state of Washington and the other in British Columbia, Canada.

    "This is the third outbreak in North America, the first in the United States, but we know these animal-derived pet treats are frequently contaminated with salmonella," said report co-author Fred Angulo, an epidemiologist at the CDC's Division of Foodborne, Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, part of the National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases.

    "There probably have been more cases," Angulo said. "There's certainly salmonella being brought into people's homes on pet treats. People are probably getting sick but not attributing it to contact with pet treats," he added.

    All the patients included in the CDC report developed diarrhea, and one also experienced vomiting. That patient, an 81-year-old woman, required hospitalization, according to the report.

    In each case, the illness was traced back to pet treats contaminated with Salmonella, concluded experts, who detailed their findings in the CDC journal Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

    The manufacturers had received frozen, raw beef parts from slaughterhouses in Canada and the United States. In addition, the Washington manufacturer received frozen, raw salmon.

    "Although the pet treats were dehydrated at the British Columbia and Washington plants, the dehydration temperatures were not high enough to kill bacteria that might have been present. No processing step, such as irradiation, that would destroy Salmonella and other bacteria was used during the processing," according to the report.

    "Ultimately, the way to prevent this is at the point of production," Angulo said. "There is no need for salmonella to be present in pet treats," he said. "Pet treats can be properly produced so that salmonella would not be present. Pet treats could easily be irradiated and easily be heated to a temperature that would kill salmonella and then be quickly and safely packaged so that salmonella would not be reintroduced," he added.

    To prevent getting an infection from contaminated pet treats, the CDC recommends that people wash their hands thoroughly with soap and water after handling animal-derived pet treats. They also advise that children under the age of five, older adults and people with immune system problems stay away from animal-derived pet treats because of the possibility of severe infection or serious complications from salmonellosis.

    The agency is also calling on pet store owners, health-care providers, veterinarians, and pet treat manufacturers to provide information to pet owners about the potential health risks of animal-derived pet treats and salmonellosis prevention.

    In addition, they are urging pet treat manufacturers to use heat-treatment or irradiation that would destroy Salmonella and other bacteria during processing.

    An industry spokesman believed the problem was caused by the failure of manufacturers to follow established guidelines for the preparation of pet treats, developed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

    "The American Pet Products Manufacturers Association has worked with the FDA to develop voluntary guidelines for the preparation, manufacture and handling of pet treats," said the association's general council, Ed Rod.

    "A lot of animal products can be contaminated if they aren't processed properly," Rod said. "It sounds like there was a failure in the manufacturing process," he added.

    Rod doesn't think new regulations are needed, however. "These manufacturers may not have complied with the applicable regulations already in place," he said.

    But Angulo disagreed, saying industry and the FDA could be doing more.

    "There is an onus on the industry to prevent this from occurring," Angulo said. "Many of the larger pet food companies are aware of this hazard and are attempting to address it already, but there are a lot of small producers whose profit margins are so low that voluntary measures won't be sufficient," he said.

    "The only way to way to really prevent this might be a regulation that would require producers to prevent this from occurring," Angulo said. "The way to prevent this would be to have the FDA regulate pet treats, which they have the authority to do," he said.


    SOURCES: Ed Rod, general council, American Pet Products Manufacturers Association, Greenwich, Conn.; Fred Angulo, D.V.M., Ph.D., epidemiologist, CDC, Division of Foodborne, Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases, Atlanta; June 29, 2006, CDC: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
    • Gold Top Dog
    Ack--I hope this doesn't affect some of the smaller producers that make wheat free products!  I think I'd take my chances with salmonella rather than have to pay more for them or have them taken off the market!
    • Gold Top Dog
    I had never heard of this!  never even thought about it.  I had always knew about the dangers of handling raw meat---always wash you hands good after handling meat, once you have used a knife to cut meat, either wash it or get another knife to cut something else, thoroughly clean the cutting board, etc.  But I didn't ever think about getting it from handling dog food treats.
    • Gold Top Dog
    Nine cases in two years? Vomiting and diarrhea? Doesn't the CDC have something better to do?
    • Silver
    I thought it was common sense to wash your hands after handling meat / dog food, just like washing your hands after going to the bathroom. It's not that hard to figure out.
     
    All the bones and off cuts I get are from the butcher shops humane grade food and where I get the mince from HAS to be humane grade also
    • Gold Top Dog
    Actually it could be a lot more than that. I would never assoscieate throwing up and "bathroom trots" with having handled dog treat--would think I had one of those pesky 24 hour bugs.  As with the ProHeart6, the FDA said only 10 to 15% of the cases are reported, and many times the dogs reaction, especially if it happened weeks after the injection (AIHA, Liver disease) is never associated with the injection.  I wouldn't think they would be overly concerned if there were only 9 cases---must believe there is more.
    • Gold Top Dog
    [link>http://forum.dog.com/asp/showProfile.asp?memid=15601]smilee1079[/link] -  Do you know which 2 brands of treats were affected. I reside in Vancouver, BC and would really like to know which plant was involved here. Thanks a lot!~
    • Gold Top Dog
    No clue... I just copied this from a diff't board I go on.  Maybe do a google search for more info.
     
     
    • Gold Top Dog
    ORIGINAL: mallymute

    I thought it was common sense to wash your hands after handling meat / dog food, just like washing your hands after going to the bathroom. It's not that hard to figure out.

    All the bones and off cuts I get are from the butcher shops humane grade food and where I get the mince from HAS to be humane grade also


    No kidding!  A little common sense goes a long way, granted one has it to begin with.
    • Puppy
    ORIGINAL: smilee1079
    "The only way to way to really prevent this might be a regulation that would require producers to prevent this from occurring," Angulo said. "The way to prevent this would be to have the FDA regulate pet treats, which they have the authority to do," he said.

     
    Yet another example of having to waste peoples time to legislate to protect people from there own stupidity. I know, we should make it law that ;people have to wash their hands everytime people take a S%^T, and then if they don't I can sue them if I get sick. Then we will need to legislate to make it law that i do exercise to protect myself from heart desease, and if I don;t I will sue someone else for my own stupidity. Then we can legislate that alcohol can not be produced, and cigarettes and fatty foods and sugar filled drinks, and TV because I watch it instead of exercising.
     
    Why, BECAUSE I AM TO STUPID TO LOOK AFTER MY OWN HEALTH, so lets make it someone elses fault so I don't have to admit responsibility and then I can sue and get even more stupid and sit on my fat ass and blame everyone else for my own stupid actions.
    • Gold Top Dog
    That is funny Romal, but also sad because it has actually come to this.  Buy a cup of coffee, expect it to be hot, burn myself and then sue the resturant.  Had it been cold, it pobably would have been returned and the waitress chewed out.  Nobody wants to take responsibilty for their actions these days.  In some cases a suit is proper, but things are to out of hand.  I wear 4" backless splike heels on the gambling boat, which well be rolling, fall and crack my head and blame the boat captian and sue the company.    It was my stupid fault.  Anyone with an ounce of sense would know not to wear shoes like that, but we see them all the time.
    • Gold Top Dog
    ORIGINAL: sandra_slayton
    Actually it could be a lot more than that. I would never assoscieate throwing up and "bathroom trots" with having handled dog treat--would think I had one of those pesky 24 hour bugs.  As with the ProHeart6, the FDA said only 10 to 15% of the cases are reported, and many times the dogs reaction, especially if it happened weeks after the injection (AIHA, Liver disease) is never associated with the injection.  I wouldn't think they would be overly concerned if there were only 9 cases---must believe there is more.

     
    Well, being generous let's say only 10% of the cases are reported - this still would only indicate there are 90 cases of this in a typical 2 year period! Still not a problem, still a waste of the CDC's time, still a pointless scare tactic. This is no different from when they tell us, suddenly, that are kitchen sponges are veritable disease factories. Amazingly, we have gone through life for many years not knowing of these horrors, most of us getting a "stomach bug" only very occasionally (which, by the way, most 24 hr "flus" are mild food poisoning) and managing to live through them, but suddenly it's some grave emergency. Bleh.