At least 75 people have gotten sick after eating McDonald’s Quarter Pounders linked to a deadly E. coli strain, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Friday.
The 75 cases, up from 49 on Wednesday, have been reported in 13 states. Twenty-two people, up from 20, have been hospitalized. No new deaths have been reported.
The increase, which consists of older cases, was expected, as it can take several weeks for investigators to link illnesses to a food poisoning outbreak. The most recent case was Oct. 10.
The people who’ve gotten sick have ranged in age from 13 to 88. Most are men. Two people, including a teenager, have been hospitalized with a severe kidney condition called hemolytic uremic syndrome, which can lead to permanent kidney failure or even death, according to the CDC.
The number of cases is likely much higher than what’s been reported, as most people with E. coli infections recover on their own and are never tested for the bacteria.
E. coli symptoms — which include vomiting, diarrhea and a fever of at least 102 degrees — generally start three to four days after eating contaminated food.
The Food and Drug Administration and the CDC have zeroed in on the slivered onions served on the hamburgers as the likely source of contamination, although health officials haven’t ruled out the beef patties used for the Quarter Pounders.
On Thursday, McDonald’s confirmed that Taylor Farms, a California-based food producer, supplied the slivered onions used on the contaminated Quarter Pounders.
Taylor Farms on Wednesday issued a recall on four raw onion products because of “potential E. Coli contamination.” Several restaurant chains in Colorado — including Taco Bell, Burger King, KFC, Pizza Hut and Illegal Pete’s — said they removed onions from their menu following the recall out of an abundance of caution. The FDA said restaurant chains who received the recalled onions have been directly notified. There are no signs of any illnesses linked to those restaurants.
McDonald’s has pulled the slivered onions and Quarter Pounder patties in question from its restaurants in at least 12 states: Colorado, Kansas, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Iowa, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico and Oklahoma.
It remains unclear whether Taylor Farms transported the slivered onions directly to McDonald’s locations or if they arrived through a distributor. Taylor Farms has not responded to multiple requests for comment.
McDonald’s is being sued by two people who said they fell ill after eating at the restaurant.
The plaintiffs in the two lawsuits are both represented by Ron Simon, managing partner of Ron Simon & Associates, a food safety law firm. Simon told NBC News on Thursday that he’s representing a total of 15 people who say they were sickened because of the outbreak.
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