Health & Fitness

More Salmonella Illnesses In IL, Source Still Unknown

Federal health officials now say 34 Illinois residents fell ill in a multi-state outbreak.

ILLINOIS — A month after the CDC said 23 Illinois residents were infected with salmonella in a multi-state outbreak, that number has grown to 34.

Some 592 people across 36 states were sickened by salmonella, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in an update last week. Federal health officials are still looking for the food source linked to the illness.

As of late September, 23 Illinois residents had been sickened in the outbreak. That number had grown by 11 by last week.

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State and local public health officials are interviewing people about the foods they ate in the week they got sick, federal health officials said.

People who got sick ranged in age from 1 to 97, with a median age of 36. Fifty-seven percent of people who were sickened were female.

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Some 363 people had their information available and 116 of them — or 32 percent — were hospitalized, federal health officials said. No deaths have been reported.

The CDC said there may be more people who got sick than the numbers reflect, since many people recover from salmonella without getting medical care or getting tested.

Health officials found a strain of salmonella in a takeout condiment cup containing cilantro and lime in late September. The cup also contained onions, the CDC said, but none were left by the time it was tested. The agency said they couldn't find which food item was contaminated since there were multiple items in one container.

The CDC says to call your doctor if you experience salmonella symptoms, including the following.

  • A fever higher than 102 degrees.
  • Diarrhea, including bloody diarrhea or diarrhea that has continued for more than three days.
  • Vomiting.
  • Signs of dehydration, such as not urinating, dry mouth and throat, feeling dizzy when standing up.

Most people infected with salmonella experience diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps within six hours to six days of eating contaminated food.


See Also: Salmonella Outbreak: 23 Sick In IL, Strain Found In Takeout Box

Ethan Duran, Patch Staff, contributed to this report

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