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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page paper examines the E.coli outbreak that occurred in the west at the Jack in the Box restaurants in 1993. What could have been done to prevent the outbreak is noted. Recommendations are made to prevent the spread of E.coli in the future. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA648ec.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
trace," 2006). Bloody diarrhea is associated with the illness that also sometimes sees kidney problems ("U.S. health investigators trace," 2006). E.coli is associate with meat products but it is
true that E.coli can contaminate produce due to untreated manure ("U.S. health investigators trace," 2006). That is what happened in 2006 when people could not eat raw spinach because
of the fear of E.coli contamination. Of course, that was nothing compared to the outbreak that occurred during the 1990s when the Jack in the Box chain would undergo a
public relations nightmare. The Jack in the Box incident would see hundreds of people sick and three dead. The real tragedy was that children were most vulnerable. The fast
food restaurants are designed to lure children and what better place is there to go than to a restaurant named after a childrens toy? This incident would frighten parents around
the country. They wondered whether or not any fast food hamburger was safe. Even at their own barbeques, where they made their own patties, they made sure that no red
was showing when that hamburger was done. But the worst part of the dilemma was that it could have been prevented. Even if the restaurant chain had a bad lot
of meat, they might have nipped the problem in the bud by cooking their hamburgers according to the law. They did not and children died. II. The E.
Coli Outbreak of 1993 There had been a frenzy when the E. coli outbreak in 1993 would see children succumb to illness. At the time, newspapers first reported that
a two year old boy died and it was due to tainted hamburger ("Boy dies; Ate Tainted Hamburger," 1993). When the incident first occurred, it was not construed as an
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