The final report is a summary of the field investigation
conducted by the Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA)
Food Safety Program (FSP) of the Southwest Washington E. coli
outbreak linked to Dee Creek Farm and the sample test results.
The WSDA FSP on-farm investigation and laboratory testing of
samples collected from the Dee Creek Farm confirms the Clark County
Health Department conclusion that the E. coli 0157:H7 that
sickened at least 18 people in Washington and Oregon originated from
raw milk that sold illegally by Dee Creek Farm.
E. coli 0157:H7 has been conformed in two milk
samples provided to WSDA by Dee Creek Farm through the Clark
County Health Department as well as five environmental samples
taken from Dee Creek Farm milk barn areas.
Milk, water and environmental samples were collected and
sent to WSDA's microbiology lab in Olympia, the Washington State
University College of Veterinary Medicine's field disease
investigation unit lab at Pullman and the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration lab in Bothell.
The samples testing positive for E. coli 0157:H7 were
then Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE) DNA fingerprint
cross-matched with the human illness case samples at the
Washington State Public Health Lab and determined to be the same
pattern strain of E. coli 0157:H7 with no discernable
differences.
Based on this testing, epidemiologic work from the county
health department as well as the on-farm investigation findings,
the WSDA Food Safety Program has conclusively determined that
Dee Creek Farm is the source of the outbreak.
Dee Creek Farm illegally sold raw milk without required WSDA
Milk Producer and Milk Processor licenses and sanitary public
health inspections.
Raw Milk bought and distributed from Dee Creek Farm, was
consumed by all affected people prior to their becoming ill.
Public health officials in Washington and Oregon
identified eighteen (18) people who developed symptoms
consistent with E, coli infection. Five (5) Clark County
children were hospitalized with two (2) children needing
critical care and life support during the incident.
On December 12, 2005, the WSDA FSP was notified by the Washington
State Department of Health (WDOH) of E. coli 0157:H7
illnesses in the Vancouver, Washington area.
WSDA FSP
Manager Claudia G. Coles was contacted by WDOH Public Health
Advisor, Janet Anderberg and informed that the Clark County Health
Department had linked E.coli 0157:H7 illness cases to the
consumption of raw milk obtained from Dee Creek Farm located in
Woodland, Washington, which is in Cowlitz County.
Clark and Cowlitz county health officials and WSDA
coordinated efforts for an on-farm investigation and collection of
samples that were received from either the farm or shareholders who
provided milk product to the Clark County Health Department. The
farm was apparently providing raw milk through a cow-share program
where “shares” of cows are sold to individuals or families in
exchange for milk product.
During the summer of 2005, a Portland, Oregon area
news article indicated that the farm operated as a cow-share dairy
business where 45 parties own a share of 5 Jersey milking cows. A
WSDA letter was sent to the firm on August 11, 2005, ordering the
farm to cease the dispensing, giving, trading or selling of milk, or
to meet the requirements of a milk producer and retail raw milk
processor. On September 1, 2005, Dee Creek farm sent a response
letter to WSDA stating that they were currently not selling milk but
indicating they were planning on working towards meeting the
requirements for licensing.
Since the farm was not licensed by WSDA as a legal
dairy operation for milk production or milk processing, WSDA had no
knowledge of farm milking and bottling practices. On the evening of
December 12, 2005, WSDA attempted to contact Dee Creek Farm
representatives by telephone but only reached an answering machine
where a message requesting a return call was left. Cowlitz County
Health Department officials were able to reach the farm on December
13, 2005 and made arrangements for both Cowlitz County and WSDA
officials to visit the farm and interview the Dee Creek Farm
owners. An attempt was made to obtain the list of cow-share holders
who received the raw milk product. A Cowlitz County Department of
Health cease and desist order was served, which also required the
farm to immediately submit all records of sales or distribution of
dairy products from November 1, 2005 to present, with name and
contact information. No list was provided. Subsequently, Dee Creek
Farm owners were ordered to appear in Cowlitz County Court where the
distribution list was finally provided under an order of the court.
WSDA visited the farm three times during the week of
December 12th to conduct a thorough investigation and sampling of
milk, water, animals and the farm environment. The first two visits
were limited as the Dee Creek family members were being taken to
their doctor, meeting with their attorney or appearing in Cowlitz
County Court. Consequently, a complete investigation was not made
until four days after the outbreak was announced by Clark County
Health officials.
The on-farm investigation noted a number of factors
that point to practices that may have contributed to the E.coli
O157:H7 outbreak and support the reasons that raw milk for human
consumption is a high risk and potentially hazardous product.
As noted in the recent article presented at the 2005
National Mastitis Council’s Annual meeting titled “Foodborne
Pathogens, Mastitis, Milk Quality and Dairy Food Safety”
published by S.P.Oliver, B.M. Jayarno and R.A. Almeida, the origin
of foodborne pathogens can be from excretion from the udder of an
infected animal, or through direct contact with infected sources in
the environment. Most foodborne pathogens inhabit the ruminant
intestinal tract, and therefore, dairy cattle are considered a major
reservoir of Salmonella, Campylobacter, and Shiga-toxin
producing E. coli (STEC) of which E.coli O157:H7 is a sub
serotype. E.coli O157:H7 is characterized by low infectious
doses (1-100 colony-forming units) and they are highly pathogenic in
humans where they cause serious acute and long-term illness, and can
be fatal.
Numerous studies and illness outbreak data have
documented that foodborne pathogens of public health significance
have been isolated from bulk tank milk and are capable of causing
disease in humans. The authors also reviewed studies that indicate
that fecal and foodborne pathogen contamination occurs during the
harvest of raw milk (i.e., milking, collection, and storage) and the
farm environment likely plays a major role in the presence of
foodborne pathogens in bulk tank milk. They point out that reducing
the potential for contamination during the harvesting of milk should
result in the reduction (but not elimination) of foodborne pathogens
in raw milk.
WSDA inspectors noted a number if issues that are of
concern and demonstrate that the farm would not meet public health
requirements if license applications for Milk Producer and Milk
Processor were submitted.
Some of the significant items noted in the field
investigation report and documented by WSDA are:
No
animal health testing documentation for brucellosis and
tuberculosis or health permits; large herd of wild elk in
contact with Dee Creek Farm beef cattle.
No
water or waste water system available at milk barn for milking
operations or cleaning; no hand wash or equipment sinks
available for cleaning and sanitizing; no bacteriological test
results were provided for the well water system used by the
farm.
Entrance to the milk barn parlor had approximately 12 inches of
deep mud/manure with standing water that the cows walked through
as they entered the barn; dirt flooring with rubber mats had
mud/manure and debris and the milking bucket unit was in direct
contact with these unclean surfaces during milk production.
Although udder washing and teat pre-milking and post-milking was
conducted whereby the udders appeared clean, cross-contamination
was observed during the milk preparation process such as when
during the udder preparation of the third cow, the cloth towel
was exposed to contamination when it was placed on top of the
milking unit and then used to dry the just washed udders.
Cross-contamination of the milk bucket system occurred during
the milking process such as when the inflation was soiled as it
was being attached to the udders because it came into contact
with the muddy leg of the cow and then inside of the milk
inflation lip was wiped with a cloth towel that had been used to
dry the udder of the cow being prepped for milking; chickens
were present in the milk barn during milking next to the milking
unit and actually flew over the milking unit at the start of
milking; inflations are left dangling and unprotected when
3-teated cow milked; no cleaning/sanitizing (backflush system)
of the inflation units available prior to milking the next cow.
Milk
transferred into stainless steel containers that are stored and
transported in a vehicle that contained dirt and hay debris
directly under the containers; no separate milk processing area
from domestic kitchen available; no raw milk-warning label
provided on the containers.
Specific
observations made by WSDA inspectors during the farm visits
regarding the milk production and milk processing operations are
detailed in the final field investigative report. A photo
documentation and description of the photos is attached to this
summary showing Dee Creek Farm surroundings, milk production and the
area where bottling is conducted.
Milk samples were provided to
WSDA through the Clark County Health Department who received product
either from Dee Creek Farm representative Summer Steenbarger or
other shareholders who provided product. The five (5) milk products
that were obtained by Clark County and submitted to WSDA for testing
were analyzed for E.coli O157:H7, Listeria monocytogenes
and Salmonella pathogenic bacteria. All other samples were
analyzed for E.coli O157:H7.
A total of five (5) milk
products were obtained from either Dee Creek or shareholders and
provided to Clark County and submitted to WSDA for testing.
One (1)
partial filled gallon container of milk provided to Clark County
via Dee Creek Farm after being returned to Dee Creek from a
shareholder was received by WSDA on the morning of 12-14-05.
(WSDA Lab #05F-756)
Two (2)
milk products were received by WSDA in the late afternoon of
12-14-05 from Clark County health Department. A skimmed cream
milk product and a whey sample from making buttermilk were
provided to the county via Dee Creek Farm and were reported to
have come from a shareholder. (WSDA Lab # 05F-762 -skimmed
cream) and (WSDA Lab #05F-763 -Whey)
Two (2)
one-gallon milk products were received by WSDA on 12-19-05 from
Clark County Health Department. The samples were provided to
the county directly from a shareholder. The products were
received in a frozen state and one container was dated 11-28
(WSDA Lab # 05F-788) and the other was dated 12-5 (WSDA Lab
#05F-789)
A total of five (5) water
samples were collected from the farm.
Four
(4) water samples were collected on 12-15-05
1)
Residential kitchen processing
area sink. (WSDA Lab #05F-776)
2)
Cow water tank located in winter
mudpack/pasture. (WSDA Lab #05F-777)
3)
Outside faucet between
greenhouses. (WSDA Lab #05F-778)
4)
Lower pond at bottom of pasture.
(WSDA Lab #05F-779)
One
(1) water sample was collected on 12-16-05
1)
Belted Galloway beef cattle water
trough (WSDA Lab #05F-782 and WSU tested)
A total of thirty–two (32)
environmental swab samples were collected at the farm.
Twelve
(12) environmental swab samples were collected on 12-15- 05.
(WSDA Lab # 05F-764 –05F-775)
Twenty
(20) environmental samples were collected on 12-16-05. (These
samples were analyzed at WSU and FDA labs.)
Two sets of individual cow
milk samples were tested.
Five
(5) individual cow milk samples were provided to WSDA by Dee
Creek Farm through Clark County Health Department on 12-14-05.
Five (5) rectum anal mucosa
samples were collected from each cow after milking was observed and
collected on 12-16-05 by WSDA Animal Services Veterinarian Dr. Mark
Kinsel. These samples were tested at the WSU lab.
Positive E. coli O157:H7
test results occurred with the following seven (7) samples:
One (1) partial filled gallon container of milk provided to
Clark County via Dee Creek Farm after being return to Dee Creek
from a shareholder was received by WSDA on the morning of
12-14-05. (WSDA Lab #05F-756)
One (1) of the five (5) individual cow milk samples that were
provided to WSDA by Dee Creek Farm through Clark County Health
Department on 12-14-05. (WSDA Lab #05F-757 – Sorrell)
One (1) of the twelve (12) environmental swab samples that were
collected on 12-15- 05.
Swab #2 - Topside of rubber mat in milking area, beneath
where cows are milked. (WSDA Lab # 05F-765)
Three (3) of the twenty (20) environmental swab samples that
were collected on 12-16- 05 and tested at the WSU Lab in
Pullman, WA
Swab #2 - Holding pen mud-pack/pasture at
entrance to milking area. (WSU #E11607)
Swab #9 - Topside of rubber mat in milking area.
(WSU # E11608)
Swab #10 - Mud on the ground just inside the door
to the milking area. (WSU # E11609)
One (1) of the twenty (20) environmental swab samples that were
collected on 12-16- 05 and tested at the FDA Lab in Bothell,
WA.
Swab #1 - Topside of rubber mat in milking area.
(no FDA sample number available at the time of the report)
These seven E.coli O157:H7
positive sample isolate results were then cross matched with human
illness cases at the WDOH Public Health Lab located in Shoreline,
WA. All isolates were designated with the same Pulsed-field Gel
electrophoresis (PFGE) pattern name as the outbreak pattern and are
indistinguishable from the outbreak strain. The WDOH Public Health
Lab used standardized PulseNet methods. Test results were provided
to WSDA showing individual DNA fingerprint patterns for each isolate
using two different restriction enzymes. Both enzyme test results
demonstrated that the WSDA samples matched the human case samples in
this outbreak.
The WDOH Public Health
laboratory reports show the matching DNA fingerprint patterns.
The results are identified by
the following lab sample numbers: WDOH PHL # 9415, 9416, 9417, 9422,
9448, 9449 and 9469 are all human isolates and #9432-9435, 9450,
9451, 9470-9475, 9510 and 9511 are all samples collected from Dee
Creek Farm.
This WSDA FSP investigation along with the
epidemiological work by the County Health Departments demonstrates
that the illegal raw milk provided by Dee Creek Farms was the source
of the E. coli O157:H7 that sickened at least 18 people in
Washington and Oregon.
Report prepared and submitted by:
Claudia G. Coles
Food Safety Program Manager
Washington State Department of Agriculture