Categories: Health

In Antioch, Thanksgiving outbreak kills three

Heartbreak and hospitality. News of an illness that sickened as many as 19 and killed three after a community Thanksgiving luncheon in Antioch, California, has grown increasingly grim. The meal, served to 800 people by the Golden Hills Community Church at the Antioch American Legion Hall, appears to have been comprised mostly of food prepared in volunteers’ private homes, Food Safety News reports.

Tracing the origin of an outbreak is never an exact science.

For some context: Perhaps the most devastating incident of foodborne illness in American history—a 1993 E. coli outbreak linked to undercooked hamburger at 73 Jack in the Box restaurants—killed just one person more than the Antioch incident. In that case, four people died, all of them children.

The Contra Costa County coroner identified the three Antioch victims (all residents of local assisted-living facilities) on Wednesday of this week. SFGate reports all three shared “similar intestinal abnormalities,” but biological samples for 21 foodborne illnesses have come back negative and the official cause of death has yet to be determined.

Related Post

Tracing the origin of an outbreak is never an exact science. And this one may prove especially difficult, given how much of the food had been prepared in private homes. Food Safety News reports only mashed potatoes and stuffing were prepared on premises, while green beans were warmed up there.

What makes the Antioch case particularly troubling is that the meal, as hundreds of similar community meals across the country would presumably also have been on Thanksgiving day, was served without having secured permits to do so (event permits typically prohibit serving food made in private homes or facilities without licenses).

But that’s the nature of community meals: they’re often homegrown, given charitably, and prepared with limited resources for people of limited means. Any good hospitality narrative necessarily includes a shared feast. And nobody ever wants to imagine an epilogue like this.

Kate Cox
Share
Published by
Kate Cox

Recent Posts

Is California giving its methane digesters too much credit?

Every year, California dairy farms emit hundreds of thousands of tons of the potent greenhouse…

2 years ago

Your car is killing coho salmon

Highway 7 runs north-south through western Washington, carving its way through a landscape sparsely dotted…

2 years ago

The pandemic has transformed America’s dining landscape into an oligopoly dominated by chains 

One of the greatest pleasures I had as a child growing up in the Chicago…

2 years ago

California is moving toward food assistance for all populations—including undocumented immigrants

Undocumented immigrants experience food insecurity at much higher rates than other populations, yet they are…

2 years ago

Babka, borscht … and pumpkin spice? Two writers talk about Jewish identity through contemporary cookbooks.

Writer Charlotte Druckman and editor Rebecca Flint Marx are both Jewish journalists living in New…

2 years ago

How some big grocery chains help ensure that food deserts stay barren

Last fall, first-year law student Karissa Kang arrived at Yale University and quickly set out…

2 years ago