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Frozen pomegranate has been linked to a death in South Australia.

SA HEALTH: South Australians are reminded to dispose of 180g Creative Gourmet frozen pomegranate arils, following the death of a 64-year-old woman who contracted hepatitis A linked to the national recall.

SA Health’s Chief Medical Officer and Chief Public Health Officer, Professor Paddy Phillips, said the case has been referred to the Coroner.

“This is a rare and tragic case and I offer my sincere condolences to the woman’s family,” Professor Phillips said.

“The majority of people infected with hepatitis A recover fully and the woman’s death is the only death linked to this recalled product nationally to date.

“The incubation period for hepatitis A is generally 15-50 days, so we don’t anticipate further cases because the product was recalled two months ago.

“While we expect most people would have disposed of the recalled product, we urge everyone to double-check freezers and remove any affected products.

“Fresh pomegranate and frozen Australian-grown pomegranate products are not affected.”

On 7 April, SA Health issued advice to the public following the owner of Creative Gourmet, Entyce Food Ingredients, initiating a precautionary recall of the product because of a link to a hepatitis A outbreak in New South Wales.

SA Health issued a reminder to the community about the recall on 8 May.

There have been 24 cases of hepatitis A nationally linked to the recalled product, including two cases in South Australia.

Symptoms of hepatitis A include nausea, vomiting, fever, yellowing of the skin, dark urine and pale stools, and the infection can take from 15 to 50 days to develop.

If symptoms appear, people who have eaten Creative Gourmet frozen pomegranate from Coles should consult their doctor as early as possible.
Any consumers concerned about their health should seek medical advice.

Previously on this story…

In May we shared that the latest cases include a 65-year-old woman who is in a serious condition in hospital after contracting a disease linked with a batch of contaminated frozen fruit.

The victim, from South Australia, was struck down by Hepatitis A – one of 11 across the country to have contracted the disease in the past month.

A 33-year-old male in South Australia was also hospitalised after being infected, but has since been discharged.

South Australian health authorities alerted the public Tuesday, warning it could take 15 to 50 days to feel the effect of eating the contaminated product.

Director of food and controlled drugs, Dr Fay Jenkins, said it was possible the two South Australian victims were affected by the batch recalled in New South Wales.

‘The gap between eating one of these products and becoming sick can be any time between 15 days and 50 days, so it’s quite possible that the two cases in South Australia ate this product before the recall happened,’ she told Nine News on Wednesday.

‘We know frozen goods, in particular foods like berries and pomegranate, can sometimes stay in people’s freezers for many months following their purchase,’ she said in a statement.

‘We would ask consumers to check their freezer and dispose of 180g Creative Gourmet Frozen Pomegranate Arils packets with any best-before date up to March 21, 2020, or return them to Coles for a full refund.’

Original post

NSW Health warned people in April who may have bought frozen pomegranate from Coles not to eat it, after it was established multiple people who contracted the infection across NSW had consumed the fruit.

Entyce Food Ingredients on Saturday issued a statement identifying the potential culprit as Creative Gourmet Frozen Pomegranate (180g) with a best before date up to and including March 21, 2020.

Five cases of Hepatitis A were connected to the fruit in NSW and a sixth case in Western Australia, NSW Health says.

Three further suspected infections were  investigated in NSW, Queensland and the ACT, NSW Health director of communicable diseases Vicky Sheppeard told AAP on Monday.

Symptoms

Hepatitis A symptoms can take up to 50 days to develop and include nausea, vomiting, fever and a yellowing of the skin.

Read more – Recall issued for  Creative Gourmet Frozen Fruit Range

Recently five people have died in a national outbreak of listeria linked to contaminated rockmelons. Read more here.

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  • So pleased I resisted the urge to buy some of this when I saw it in Coles.

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  • I don’t buy pomegranates so that’s for me.

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  • This is the first time I’ve heard about the pomegranate recall.
    Some much of our local produce goes to waste wish more frozen fruits were Australian

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  • Just brings home another reason to buy Aussie made, owned and grown! You just never know what’s in the overseas stuff

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  • This is just terribly sad!

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  • Although I’m immunized against Hep A, I’m careful not to eat frozen pomegranate.

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  • Health and safety standards need to be taken seriously. I feel so sorry for the lady who died from the frozen pomegranate contamination.

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  • there seems to be a run of fruit problems recently. we are only just getting over the rock melon one!

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  • This is vey sad. Ths brand seems one to avoid.

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  • Almost all the fruits from this brand have been on the news. Quite worrying!

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  • Oh no. Another death? So sad for her. :-(

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  • The poor lady,hopefully no-one else was affected by this.

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  • I dont use pomegranate in any dish

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  • I wasn’t aware this was available, but thank you for the warning.

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  • I never buy frozen pomegranate. Cleaning a pomegranate is messy alright, but it’s the real deal. It’s like kneading the bread dough with your hands, instead of using a machine.

    Reply

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