After two
people were sickened by Campylobacter, the New York state departments of health
and agriculture on Thursday warned consumers in Tompkins County and surrounding
areas not to drink unpasteurized milk produced at Jerry Dell Farm in Freeville,
due to possible contamination.
The state
Health Department said it notified the farm on Sept. 22 that two people who had
consumed its raw milk were infected with Campylobacter enteritis.
Tests
completed Thursday at the New York State Food Laboratory found that the
unpasteurized milk produced at Jerry Dell Farm, and collected on Sept. 22,
contained Campylobacter, the health department said.
The farm
had voluntarily suspended milk sales and will be prohibited from selling raw
milk until subsequent sampling indicates that the product is free of pathogens.
The health
department advised anyone who still has milk purchased from Jerry Dell Farm to
discard it immediately, and said individuals experiencing gastrointestinal
illness symptoms after consuming milk purchased from Jerry Dell Farm should
contact their health care provider.
Jerry Dell
Farm holds a permit to legally sell raw milk at the farm. Producers who sell
raw milk to consumers in New York must have a permit and must sell directly to
consumers on the farm where the milk is produced. These producers must also
post a notice at the point of sale indicating that raw milk does not provide
the protection of pasteurization. Farms with permits to sell raw milk are
inspected monthly by the New York State Department of Agriculture and
Marketing.
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