Federal health officials have announced a Salmonella outbreak tied to cucumbers imported from Mexico that has sickened 68 people across 19 states.
SunFed Produce, LLC, has issued a voluntary recall for the vegetables sold from October 12, 2024, to November 26, 2024. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said the American slicer cucumbers were packaged in bulk cardboard containers labeled with the SunFed label in a generic white box or black plastic crate with a sticker that reads, "Agrotato, S.A. de C.V."
"FDA is working with SunFed Produce, LLC and their direct customers to determine if additional downstream customer recalls are necessary," the agency said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as of November 26, 2024, a total of 68 people infected with the outbreak strain of Salmonella have been reported in 19 states. Illness-onset dates range from October 12, 2024, to November 16, 2024.
18 people hospitalized
Of the 50 people for whom information is available, 18 have been hospitalized. No deaths have been reported. Of 33 people interviewed by health officials, 27 (82%) reported eating cucumbers in the days prior to illness.
Montana has reported the most cases, with 16. Colorado follows with 8 and Oregon with 7. Texas has 5 cases and South Dakota has 4. The median age of those sickened is 27, and 66% are females.
CDC and states identified six illness sub-clusters at two assisted living facilities, three school districts, and one restaurant.
"CDC and states identified six illness sub-clusters at two assisted living facilities, three school districts, and one restaurant," the CDC said in its outbreak report. "An illness sub-cluster is a group of unrelated people who all ate at the same location or event, such as a restaurant, long-term care facility, or school. Cucumbers were served at these six sub-cluster locations."