This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

Expert offers tips to prevent
salmonella poisoning when grilling

  • Faculty member Thomas Russo says there are easy ways to avoid salmonella contamination, especially when grilling ground beef or poultry. Photo: DOUGLAS LEVERE

By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
Published: Aug. 8, 2011

In light of the recent recall of 36 million pounds of ground turkey due to reports of salmonella poisoning in 26 states—including New York—a UB infectious disease expert offers some useful advice, including tips for those contemplating outdoor barbecues.

“In most individuals who are healthy, the illness that salmonella causes will be self-limiting, meaning it will resolve on its own without any treatment,” says Thomas A. Russo, professor in the Department of Medicine, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, and head of the department’s Infectious Disease Division. “If you are healthy and you become sick from salmonella, you will experience diarrhea, you may run a low-grade fever and you may feel lethargic for a few days, but you will improve fairly quickly without any lasting effects.”

However, he cautions, people whose immune systems are compromised for very specific reasons can become much sicker from salmonella poisoning.

“Anyone who is taking steroids, individuals on certain cancer chemotherapies, transplant recipients on immunosuppressive drugs, those with sickle-cell disease, anyone infected with HIV/AIDS, people with certain rheumatologic conditions that are on biologic modulates such as TNF-alpha inhibitors, as well as newborns and those older than 70 years old, would be at increased risk and should take extra precautions not to become infected by salmonella,” Russo says.

He says that there are some easy, surefire ways to avoid contamination, especially for anyone who grills ground beef or turkey.

“If someone is grilling turkey or beef burgers, they’ll often make the raw patty, bring it out to the grill on a plate, grill it and then slap it on the same plate once it’s cooked,” Russo says.

“Since it’s often the guys in the family who are doing the grillwork, this message is for them: Put the cooked patties on a clean plate, otherwise you run the risk of contaminating the cooked burgers.”

Russo adds that any time people make patties out of raw meat, they also need to wash their hands well and any surfaces they have touched. The best way to wash down kitchen surfaces, he says, is with a solution of 1 tablespoon of bleach with 1 gallon of water.

He adds that if the ground turkey is cooked to 160-165 F, which should result in the juices “running clear” and no pink meat, then the infectious risk should be eliminated.