Ten people who ate at a Fourth of July event in Wapato, Washington are now confirmed or suspected cases of Salmonella infection, and the Yakima Health District is trying to trace where the bacteria came from. The event was hosted at Imperial’s Garden at 4817 Lateral A Road, though the health district is careful to note it was not tied to the operations of the Imperial’s Garden farm stand, and the business is cooperating with investigators to pin down the source.
The timing lines up the way Salmonella usually does. Symptoms tend to surface anywhere from 6 hours to 5 days after exposure, so anyone who got sick from the July 4 event most likely started feeling it between July 5 and July 9—severe or bloody diarrhea, fever, chills, cramping, and sometimes vomiting. What people tend not to appreciate is what happens after the misery lifts: someone who has recovered can keep shedding the bacteria for days or even months, which is exactly why food handlers are held to a different standard. Food workers who got sick after attending should call the health district at (509) 249-6532, and anyone with a confirmed infection needs the district’s sign-off before returning to work.
That last detail is the whole ballgame in an outbreak like this. A single infected food worker, back on the line before they’ve stopped shedding, can turn one bad meal into a county-wide investigation. Restaurant operators are supposed to be watching their employees for symptoms and pulling anyone who’s ill off food-handling duty—the rules have been on the books for years. Outbreaks like this one are a reminder that they only work when somebody actually follows them.
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