PEARSON & PEARSON, L.L.P.

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James H. Pearson
Super Lawyers
Seriously Outstanding
Selected 2007, 2008
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AV® Peer Review Rating — An AV® certification mark is a significant rating accomplishment - a testament to the fact that a lawyer's peers rank him or her at the highest level of professional excellence.
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Bain Pearson and Jim Pearson have been selected as one of "Houston's Top Lawyers" by H Texas Magazine for 2007 and 2008.
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Salmonella -- E. Coli



Our law firm is an aggressive group of lawyers practicing trial law. Our practice is concentrated in the areas of: personal injury, environmental, chemical, and commercial litigation.

Our current Projects are listed in the Menu on the left side of this screen. Current projects include …

-- Food illnesses (Salmonella, E-coli, etc.)

We are happy to provide you free information, to discuss and review your individual situation, or try to assist you. The references shown below will lead you to some of the critical information you need in a review of this tragic area. The source of most of this information is shown. We have attempted to rely upon Federal Government Agencies, the News Services, health providers and other reliable sources.

You may contact our law firm toll free at (800) 447-6443 or locally at (713) 739-8600. You may also contact Jim Pearson directly at (713) CALL-JIM or via email at Pearsonpc@aol.com. Please visit our Homepage for more information on our law firm and what we can offer our clients.


Despite four outbreaks of salmonella illness from peanut products in the past three years, the federal government has not changed the safety measures required of peanut companies or instructed its inspectors to test for the bacteria.   In all, the outbreaks have killed nine people and sickened more than 1,400.   Although officials at the Food and Drug Administration promised to intensify inspections after a salmonella outbreak caused by Peter Pan peanut butter in 2007 sickened 628 people, the agency did not increase checks or require microbial testing at peanut plants, officials have acknowledged in congressional hearings.   That is still true today, even after Congress and President Obama sharply criticized the FDA for oversight failures leading to the recent outbreak of salmonella illness linked to products sold by Peanut Corporation of America. That outbreak, which began in September and is slowing, has sickened more than 690 people, killing nine, and triggered the largest food recall in U.S. history.   During its investigation of the Peanut Corporation case, the FDA discovered about 20 additional facilities that have been making peanut products without the knowledge of federal regulators. It learned about the facilities because they were buying peanuts from PCA, said Michael Herndon, an FDA spokesman. The agency will not name the 20 facilities or say where they are located, he said, adding that FDA inspectors are planning to visit each site shortly.
2009 Peanut-Butter Salmonella (Click here to go to our Page)
After announcing the recall Monday night, the FDA spent today collecting the names of the 36 companies to whom the company at the heart of the investigation sold pistachios. The FDA is beginning the slow process of contacting those who received bad pistachios to figure out where the nuts went from there.   The bad pistachios are believed to be coming from the second largest pistachio producer in the country, Setton International Foods, in Terra Bella, Calif. The FDA and the California Department of Health have been inspecting and investigating the facility for the past few days.   Concerns about bacteria-tainted pistachios surfaced when Kraft Foods tested them as part of a routine analysis and "found a variety of different types of salmonella."   Acheson said today the investigation has so far found that the California plant was also testing its nuts, and did, on occasion, find salmonella.
Nuts! Salmonella Fears Hit Pistachios (Click here to go to our Page)


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Executives Rufuse to Eat Their own Peanut Butter!


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Timeline for Reporting of E. coli Cases
Supreme Beef was a Texas-based company in the business of processing, grinding and selling meat products. As a major domestic wholesale supplier of beef products, the company had several contracts with the USDA to support the National School Lunch Program...
Supplier of School Lunches Fails Inspections. Click to Read the Federal Case.
 

To find cases in an outbreak of E. coli O157 infections, public health laboratories perform a kind of “DNA fingerprinting” on E. coli O157 laboratory samples. Investigators determine whether the “DNA fingerprint” pattern of E. coli O157 bacteria from one patient is the same as that from other patients in the outbreak and from the contaminated food. Bacteria with the same “DNA fingerprint” are likely to come from the same source. .

A series of events occurs between the time a patient is infected and the time public health officials can determine that the patient is part of an outbreak. This means that there will be a delay between the start of illness and confirmation that a patient is part of an outbreak.

1.      Incubation time: The time from eating the contaminated food to the beginning of symptoms. For E. coli O157, this is typically 3-4 days.

2.      Time to treatment: The time from the first symptom until the person seeks medical care, when a diarrhea sample is collected for laboratory testing. This time lag may be 1-5 days.

3.      Time to diagnosis: The time from when a person gives a sample to when E. coli O157 is obtained from it in a laboratory. This may be 1-3 days from the time the sample is received in the laboratory.

4.      Sample shipping time: The time required to ship the E. coli O157 bacteria from the laboratory to the state public health authorities that will perform “DNA fingerprinting”. This may take 0-7 days depending on transportation arrangements within a state and the distance between the clinical laboratory and public health department.

5.      Time to “DNA fingerprinting”: The time required for the state public health authorities to perform “DNA fingerprinting” on the E. coli O157 and compare it with the outbreak pattern. Ideally this can be accomplished in 1 day. However, many public health laboratories have limited staff and space, and experience multiple emergencies at the same time. Thus, the process may take 1-4 days.

The time from the beginning of the patient’s illness to the confirmation that he or she was part of an outbreak is typically about 2-3 weeks. Case counts in the midst of an outbreak investigation must be interpreted within this context.

 

 


Shigellosis is an infectious disease caused by a group of bacteria called Shigella. Most who are infected with Shigella develop diarrhea, fever, and stomach cramps starting a day or two after they are exposed to the bacteria. The diarrhea is often bloody. Shigellosis usually resolves in 5 to 7 days. Persons with shigellosis in the United States rarely require hospitalization. A severe infection with high fever may be associated with seizures in children less than 2 years old. Some persons who are infected may have no symptoms at all, but may still pass the Shigella bacteria to others.
What is shigellosis?
The following is a listing of the 27 states currently operating meat and poultry inspection (MPI) programs. States are listed alphabetically.
USDA Regulations and list of Participating States.


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Escherichia Coli



 

What is Escherichia coli?

 

Escherichia coli (abbreviated as E. coli) are a large and diverse group of bacteria. Although most strains of E. coli are harmless, others can make you sick. Some kinds of E. coli can cause diarrhea, while others cause urinary tract infections, respiratory illness and pneumonia, and other illnesses. Still other kinds of E. coli are used as markers for water contamination—so you might hear about E. coli being found in drinking water, which are not themselves harmful, but indicate the water is contaminated. It does get a bit confusing—even to microbiologists.

 

What are Shiga toxin-producing E. coli?

 

Some kinds of E. coli cause disease by making a toxin called Shiga toxin. The bacteria that make these toxins are called “Shiga toxin-producing” E. coli, or STEC for short. You might hear them called verocytotoxic E. coli (VTEC) or enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC); these all refer generally to the same group of bacteria.

The most commonly identified STEC in North America is E. coli O157:H7 (often shortened to E. coli O157 or even just “O157”). When you hear news reports about outbreaks of “E. coli” infections, they are usually talking about E. coli O157.

In addition to E. coli O157, many other kinds (called serogroups) of STEC cause disease. These other kinds are sometimes called “non-O157 STEC.” E. coli serogroups O26, O111, and O103 are the non-O157 serogroups that most often cause illness in people in the United States.

 

Are there important differences between E. coli O157 and other STEC?

 

Most of what we know about STEC comes from outbreak investigations and studies of E. coli O157 infection, which was first identified as a pathogen in 1982. The non-O157 STEC are not nearly as well understood, partly because outbreaks due to them are rarely identified. As a whole, the non-O157 serogroup is less likely to cause severe illness than E. coli O157; however, some non-O157 STEC serogroups can cause the most severe manifestations of STEC illness.

 

What are the symptoms of STEC infections?

 

The symptoms of STEC infections vary for each person but often include severe stomach cramps, diarrhea (often bloody), and vomiting. If there is fever, it usually is not very high (less than 101˚F/less than 38.5˚C). Most people get better within 5–7 days. Some infections are very mild, but others are severe or even life-threatening.

 

What are the complications of STEC infections?

 

Around 5–10% of those who are diagnosed with STEC infection develop a potentially life-threatening complication known as hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). Clues that a person is developing HUS include decreased frequency of urination, feeling very tired, and losing pink color in cheeks and inside the lower eyelids. Persons with HUS should be hospitalized because their kidneys may stop working and they may develop other serious problems. Most persons with HUS recover within a few weeks, but some suffer permanent damage or die.

 

Where do STEC come from?

 

STEC live in the guts of ruminant animals, including cattle, goats, sheep, deer, and elk. The major source for human illnesses is cattle. STEC that cause human illness generally do not make animals sick. Other kinds of animals, including pigs and birds, sometimes pick up STEC from the environment and may spread it.

 

How are these infections spread?

 

Infections start when you swallow STEC—in other words, when you get tiny (usually invisible) amounts of human or animal feces in your mouth. Unfortunately, this happens more often than we would like to think about. Exposures that result in illness include consumption of contaminated food, consumption of unpasteurized (raw) milk, consumption of water that has not been disinfected, contact with cattle, or contact with the feces of infected people.

Some foods are considered to carry such a high risk of infection with E. coli O157 or another germ that health officials recommend that people avoid them completely. These foods include unpasteurized (raw) milk, unpasteurized apple cider, and soft cheeses made from raw milk.

Sometimes the contact is pretty obvious (working with cows at a dairy or changing diapers, for example), but sometimes it is not (like eating an undercooked hamburger or a contaminated piece of lettuce). People have gotten infected by swallowing lake water while swimming, touching the environment in petting zoos and other animal exhibits, and by eating food prepared by people who did not wash their hands well after using the toilet. Almost everyone has some risk of infection.

 

How are STEC infections diagnosed?

 

STEC infections are usually diagnosed through lab testing of stool specimens (feces). Identifying the specific strain of STEC involved is very important for public health purposes, such as finding outbreaks. Most labs can determine if an STEC is present and can identify E. coli O157. To determine the O group of non-O157 STEC, strains must be sent to a State Public Health laboratory.


STEC infections are usually diagnosed through lab testing of stool specimens (feces). Identifying the specific strain of STEC involved is very important for public health purposes, such as finding outbreaks. Most labs can determine if an STEC is present and can identify E. coli O157. To determine the O group of non-O157 STEC, strains must be sent to a State Public Health laboratory.
Infections are diagnosed by lab testing.
It's easy to confuse viral diarrhea with diarrhea caused by bacteria such as salmonella and Escherichia coli (E. coli).


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Pearson & Pearson is an aggressive group of Trial lawyers; rated “AV” as a law firm, and selected as one of Houston’s “Top Lawyers”. Our practice is concentrated in the areas of: Burn injury and death cases; Food illnesses (Salmonella & E. coli); Tire failure and tread separation cases; Rollover cases; M.A.D.D. + D.W.I. injuries; Mesothelioma; Silicosis; and Commercial Litigation.
Pearson & Pearson is an aggressive group of Trial lawyers; rated “AV” as a law firm, and selected as one of Houston’s “Top Lawyers”. Our practice is concentrated in the areas of: Burn injury and death cases; Food illnesses (Salmonella & E. coli); Tire failure and tread separation cases; Rollover cases; M.A.D.D. + D.W.I. injuries; Mesothelioma; Silicosis; and Commercial Litigation.
Go to "Outbreaks and Tracebacks"



Pearson and Pearson, L.L.P.
2900 Weslayan - Suite 580
Houston, Texas 77027

(800) 447-6443
(713) 739-8600
(713) Call-Jim

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