The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning that papayas from Texas-based Agromod Produce have been linked to at least 97 cases of salmonella in 23 states.
As the The Boston Globe reports, the agency told consumers not to eat papayas bearing a brand sticker from Agromod Produce, which has launched a voluntary recall of its fruit. Anyone who recently purchased papayas who isn’t sure where the produce is from should ask the retailer whether the fruit is part of the recall, the FDA added.
The papayas subject to the recall were imported from Mexico. Some have tested positive for salmonella contamination, which causes diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps about 12 to 72 hours after infection. The illness usually lasts four to seven days, and most people recover without treatment.
However, in some cases salmonella can prove serious, or even fatal, and calls for treatment with antibiotics. In the current outbreak, 10 people have been hospitalized. Those most at risk include the elderly, infants and anyone whose immune system is compromised.
“Consumers, retailers and others who have papayas from Agromod Produce, Inc. should throw them away in a sealed container so people and animals, including wild animals, cannot eat them,” the FDA said in its statement.
CHRISTINE YOUNG
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