环孢子虫病例激增,消费者无从得知该避开哪些食物


2026年7月14日 美国东部时间下午3:45 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻(CBS News)

作者:梅根·塞鲁洛 记者,MoneyWatch频道
梅根·塞鲁洛是驻纽约的CBS MoneyWatch记者,报道小企业、职场、医疗保健、消费者支出和个人理财话题。她定期亮相CBS News 24/7频道讨论自己的报道。

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随着由环孢子虫引发的腹泻疾病环孢子虫病疫情不断扩大,担忧疫情的消费者纷纷在社交媒体上咨询该避开哪些食物,而公共卫生官员尚未确定感染源头。

这种疾病会引发长期严重的暴发性腹泻,进而导致严重脱水,对幼儿、老年人和免疫功能低下人群尤其危险。公共卫生专家表示,由于此次疫情的关键细节仍未明确,很难给出安全建议,公众在采取适当健康防护措施时基本处于盲目状态。

“这不是消费者能够自行解决的问题,”哥伦比亚广播公司新闻医疗记者、KFF健康新闻公共卫生特约主编塞琳·冈德博士说道。“我们基本上只能告诉那些前往发展中国家旅行的人:不要食用未煮熟且无法去皮的新鲜农产品。”

缺乏明确信息助长了网络上的广泛猜测,一些社交媒体用户点名了他们认为应对此次疫情负责的特定杂货店、餐厅或食品生产商。

“任何感染环孢子虫的人,你们所在的州是哪里?有没有缩小可能致病的饮食范围?”一名社交媒体用户在一条获得超过1300条回复的帖子中写道。

冈德表示,官方召回或确认感染源头的缺失为网络猜测提供了温床,她提醒公众在调查人员确定源头之前不要轻易得出结论。

“此次疫情尚未发布任何召回公告,”冈德补充道。“而许多病毒式传播的内容将其作为博眼球的素材,用暴发性腹泻制造冲击效果。”

7月13日,已有约2600例病例的密歇根州发布了相关指导意见,称“当前检测结果表明生菜或沙拉绿叶菜可能是此次疫情的潜在源头,但也不能完全排除其他食品”。该声明未指向任何特定生产商或零售商,但建议消费者购买整颗生菜,而非预包装的袋装绿叶菜。

美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)和美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)未立即回应置评请求。

塔可钟移除部分食材

周二,塔可钟(Taco Bell)向CBS新闻证实,已“出于预防措施,在部分门店自愿临时下架有限数量的食材”。据《华盛顿邮报》周二报道,联邦和当地卫生官员正在调查部分顾客报告的感染病例是否与此次大范围疫情有关。

塔可钟向CBS新闻表示,公共卫生官员尚未确认其门店或任何特定食材、供应商、餐厅、零售商与疫情存在关联。

“在找到致病源之前,我们实在不能将责任归咎于某家农场或加工企业,”哥伦比亚大学欧文医学中心的传染病专家努万·古纳瓦尔达纳博士告诉CBS新闻。

环孢子虫追踪沦为可选项目

一些公共卫生专家表示,人员编制缩减和疾病监测体系变革可能使得更快确定疫情源头变得更加困难。

这场疫情爆发于美国疾控中心缩减环孢子虫监测工作一年后。福布斯高级公共卫生撰稿人、医师奥马尔·阿万告诉CBS新闻,在2025年7月之前,美国疾控中心要求通过食品监测网络(FoodNet)上报环孢子虫病病例,该网络负责追踪实验室确认的环孢子虫感染病例。

“我们的监测系统在很大程度上受到了阻碍,因为我们看到联邦政府进行了多轮削减,”阿万说道。

他表示,去年被裁员的许多疾控中心员工都参与过类似此次疫情的疾病暴发应对工作,这削弱了该机构识别和控制食源性疾病的能力。

“如今环孢子虫上报已成为可选项目,因此我们的监测系统受到了阻碍,很难查清感染源头,”他说。

在没有明确产品召回的情况下,以下是健康专家建议的预防感染方法。

食品安全建议

由于调查人员尚未确定具体受污染产品,健康专家表示,最安全的做法是遵循通用食品安全预防措施。

密歇根州卫生官员指出,此前的环孢子虫病疫情与以下食品有关:

  • 袋装沙拉混合菜和套餐
  • 新鲜香菜
  • 新鲜罗勒
  • 树莓
  • 荷兰豆
  • 青葱或大葱

想要格外谨慎的消费者可以选择避开这些食品,直到调查人员确定此次疫情的源头。

哥伦比亚大学梅尔曼公共卫生学院的传染病与内科专家杰西卡·贾斯特曼博士表示,洗手也至关重要。

“人们应该加强用肥皂和流水洗手,尤其是在处理任何食物、准备食物和进食之前,”她说。

她补充道,食用前应彻底冲洗农产品。

专家告诉CBS新闻,将新鲜农产品加热至70摄氏度(158华氏度)是消灭该寄生虫的最佳方法。

“避免摄入该寄生虫的最佳方式是烹制食物,”古纳瓦尔达纳博士说道。他补充道,刷洗蔬菜也有助于去除寄生虫。“但众所周知,该寄生虫极易附着在物体表面,因此这并不能提供100%的保护。”

编辑:艾米·皮奇

环孢子虫病例激增

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/cyclosporiasis-parasite-cases-found-31-states/

As cyclosporiasis cases rise, consumers are left guessing which foods to avoid

July 14, 2026 3:45 PM EDT / CBS News

By Megan Cerullo Reporter, MoneyWatch
Megan Cerullo is a New York-based reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering small business, workplace, health care, consumer spending and personal finance topics. She regularly appears on CBS News 24/7 to discuss her reporting.

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Consumers worried about a growing outbreak of cyclosporiasis, a diarrheal illness caused by the cyclospora parasite, are turning to social media for advice on what foods to avoid as public health officials have yet to identify the source.

The illness can cause long-lasting bouts of explosive diarrhea leading to severe dehydration, particularly in young children, older adults and people who are immunocompromised. Public health experts say it is difficult to dispense safety advice because key details about the outbreak remain unknown, leaving the public largely flying blind when it comes to appropriate health precautions.

“This isn’t a problem consumers can solve,” said Dr. Celine Gounder, CBS News medical correspondent and editor-at-large for Public Health at KFF Health News. “We basically have to revert to what you’d tell someone traveling to a developing country: Don’t eat fresh produce that isn’t cooked and can’t be peeled.”

The lack of definitive information has fueled widespread speculation online, with some social media users naming specific grocery stores, restaurants or food producers they believe are responsible for the outbreak.

“Anyone who is sick with cyclospora, what state are you in and have you narrowed down what you ate that may have caused it?” one social media user wrote in a post that received more than 1,300 responses.

Gounder said the absence of an official recall or confirmed source has created fertile ground for online speculation, adding that she cautions against drawing such conclusions before investigators identify the source.

“No recall has been issued for this outbreak,” Gounder added. “And a lot of the viral content treats this as gross-out material, explosive diarrhea, played for shock value.”

On July 13, the state of Michigan, with some 2,600 cases, issued some guidance, saying that “current results point to lettuce or salad greens as a potential source for this outbreak, although other food items cannot be completely ruled out.” The statement didn’t point to any specific producer or retailer, but urged consumers to purchase whole heads of lettuce rather than pre-washed bags of greens.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Taco Bell removes some ingredients

On Tuesday, Taco Bell told CBS News that it has “voluntarily and temporarily removed limited ingredients at select restaurants as a precautionary measure.” Federal and local health officials are investigating whether illnesses reported by some customers are connected to the broader outbreak, the Washington Post reported Tuesday.

Taco Bell told CBS News that public health officials haven’t confirmed a link to its restaurants or any specific ingredient, supplier, restaurant or retailer.

“Until the culprit is found, we really can’t put the blame on a certain farm or processing company,” Dr. Nuwan Gunawardhana, an infectious disease expert at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, told CBS News.

Optional cyclospora tracking

Some public health experts say staffing reductions and changes to disease surveillance may have made it more difficult to quickly identify the source of the outbreak.

The outbreak comes about one year after the CDC scaled back monitoring of cyclospora. Before July 2025, the CDC mandated the reporting of cyclosporiasis through FoodNet, a network that tracked laboratory-confirmed infections from cyclospora, Dr. Omer Awan, a physician and senior public health contributor for Forbes, told CBS News.

“Our surveillance systems have been hindered to a large extent because of many cuts we’ve seen from the federal government,” Awan said.

Many of the CDC employees laid off last year worked on disease outbreaks like the current one, reducing the agency’s ability to identify and contain foodborne illnesses, he said.

“Now it’s become optional to report [cyclospora], so our surveillance systems have been hindered, and it’s hard to know what the source is,” he said.

In the absence of specific product recalls, here is how health experts say people can avoid contracting the disease.

Advice on food safety

Because investigators haven’t identified a specific contaminated product, health experts say the safest approach is to follow general food safety precautions.

Michigan health officials noted that previous cyclosporiasis outbreaks have been linked to:

  • Bagged salad mixes and kits
  • Fresh cilantro
  • Fresh basil
  • Raspberries
  • Snow peas
  • Green onions or scallions

People who want to be especially cautious may choose to avoid those foods until investigators identify the source of the current outbreak.

Handwashing is also essential, according to Dr. Jessica Justman, an infectious disease and internal medicine specialist at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health.

“People should step up their hand washing with soap and water, particularly before handling any food, preparing any food and eating,” she said.

Produce should be rinsed thoroughly before consumption, she added.

Heating fresh produce to 70 degrees Celsius or 158 degrees Fahrenheit is the best way to eliminate the parasite, experts told CBS News.

“The best way to avoid ingesting it is to cook your food,” Dr. Gunawardhana said. He added that brushing or scrubbing vegetables can also help get rid of it. “But it’s also known to be extremely adherent to surfaces, so it won’t protect you 100%.”

Edited by Aimee Picchi

Cyclosporiasis parasite cases skyrocket

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/cyclosporiasis-parasite-cases-found-31-states/

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