An Iowa company has dramatically expanded its nationwide recall of eggs linked to salmonella contamination amid an outbreak of the infection that has sickened hundreds of people.
In all, 250 people have been reported ill from the outbreak. But authorities said the actual number of consumers who have gotten sick is probably far greater, and HealthDay reports that this is one of the biggest salmonella outbreaks related to eggs in years. No deaths have been reported.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the ongoing outbreak began in May, shortly before new government safety rules went into effect that were intended to reduce the risk of salmonella in eggs.
A spokesman for the Iowa company involved in the recall, Wright County Egg, told The New York Times that it had put the required measures in place by the deadline.
The Times reports that Wright County Egg’s owner, Jack DeCoster, has had run-ins with regulators before over poor or unsafe working conditions, environmental violations, harassment of workers and the hiring of illegal immigrants.
The recall, which now extends to 380 million eggs, includes eggs that the company has sold since mid-May, so many likely already have been consumed.
The recalled eggs came from five different plants, and were distributed under the brand names Lucerne, Albertson, Mountain Dairy, Ralphs, Boomsma’s, Sunshine, Hillandale, Trafficanda, Farm Fresh, Shoreland, Lund, Dutch Farms, Kemps, James Farms, Glenview and Pacific Coast.
According to an FDA alert, the eggs were packaged in multiple carton sizes, including half dozen, dozen and 18-egg cartons.
The cartons have plant numbers and date codes stamped at one end. The plant number begins with the letter P, then the number, followed by the date code. The affected cartons have plant numbers 1720 and 1942 and date codes 136 to 229.
Consumers are advised to return the eggs to stores.
Salmonella can cause stomach problems like pain, diarrhea and vomiting. In rare cases, it can cause more serious illnesses such as arterial infections.


