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salmonella
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  • She contracted salmonella when she was only three weeks old.†   (source)
  • Salmonella bioweapons are of concern.
  • Salmonella has been almost entirely eliminated from Swedish and Dutch eggs.†   (source)
  • Tell her Mom was afraid of salmonella poisoning?†   (source)
  • That slaughterhouse had repeatedly failed USDA tests for Salmonella.†   (source)
  • Lynetta takes off down the hall and my mother says, 58 "Salmonella?"†   (source)
  • Does the word salmonella mean anything to you?†   (source)
  • Not long after the ruling, Supreme Beef failed another Salmonella test.†   (source)
  • Does the word salmonella mean anything to you?†   (source)
  • Moreover, high levels of Salmonella in ground beef indicate high levels of fecal contamination.†   (source)
  • "What, that you're afraid of salmonella poisoning?"†   (source)
  • Every year in the United States food tainted with Salmonella causes about 1.†   (source)
  • Sweden began a program to eliminate Salmonella from its livestock more than forty years ago.†   (source)
  • Remember that whole chicken-hen-salmonella disaster?†   (source)
  • Do you suppose they could have salmonella?†   (source)
  • Theno had previously helped Foster Farms, a family-owned poultry processor in California, eliminate most of the Salmonella from its birds.†   (source)
  • So I told him about my dad and the eggs and salmonella and how I'd been intercepting eggs for nearly two years.†   (source)
  • 5 percent of the ground beef samples taken at processing plants were contaminated with Salmonella, 11.†   (source)
  • To be infected by most food-borne pathogens, such as Salmonella, you have to consume a fairly large dose — at least a million organisms.†   (source)
  • So I told her we were afraid of salmonella poisoning because her yard was a mess and that we were just trying to spare her feelings.†   (source)
  • 1 percent of Swedish cattle harbor Salmonella, a proportion vastly lower than the rate in the United States.†   (source)
  • I looked down and mumbled, "I told her that we were afraid of salmonella poisoning because their yard was such a mess.†   (source)
  • Supreme Beef responded the next day by suing the USDA in federal court, claiming that Salmonella was a natural organism, not an adulterant.†   (source)
  • So I took a deep breath and said, "The Loskis have been throwing my eggs away because they were afraid they'd have salmonella because our yard is such a mess."†   (source)
  • In the summer and fall of 1999, a ground beef plant in Dallas, Texas, owned by Supreme Beef Processors failed a series of USDA tests for Salmonella.†   (source)
  • Salmonella?†   (source)
  • Eggs are regulated by the FDA, but chickens are regulated by the USDA, and a lack of cooperation between the two agencies has hampered efforts to reduce the levels of Salmonella in American eggs.†   (source)
  • Every year in the United States, however, more than half a million people become ill after eating eggs contaminated with Salmonella, and more than 300 people die.†   (source)
  • The tests showed that as much as 47 percent of the company's ground beef contained Salmonella — a proportion five times higher than what USDA regulations allow.†   (source)
  • On May 25, 2000, Judge Fish issued a decision in the Supreme Beef case, ruling that the presence of high levels of Salmonella in the plant's ground beef was not proof that conditions there were "unsanitary?'†   (source)
  • According to Dr. Neal D. Bernard, who heads the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, chicken manure may contain dangerous bacteria such as Salmonella and Campylobacter, parasites such as tapeworms and Giardia lamblia, antibiotic residues, arsenic, and heavy metals.†   (source)
  • Fish endorsed one of Supreme Beef's central arguments: a ground beef processor should not be held responsible for the bacterial levels of meat that could easily have been tainted with Salmonella at a slaughterhouse.†   (source)
  • Turtles can sometimes carry salmonella.†   (source)
  • There were some other cases of salmonella from formula that had been reported, but we had also picked up a turtle on the side of the road coming home from church that day.†   (source)
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