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Pritzker Olsen Law Firm Food Safety Blog
Pritzker Olsen attorneys have appeared on CBS News, Fox news, and numerous local television stations throughout the country. They have recovered millions for victims of food poisoning outbreaks. To contact our law firm, please call 1-888-377-8900 (toll free) or submit our free consultation form.
Report Links Milan IL McDonalds to Hepatitis A Outbreak
The report specifically points to the lack of proper hand washing as the cause of the outbreak:
If the first employee [at the Milan McDonalds] with hepatitis A had used proper hand washing technique while working the transmission of hepatitis A through food would not have occurred.
This employee reported to health officials that while infectious, the employee did not use gloves while working. The employee prepared foods such as bread for sandwiches that would not later be cooked, according to the report.A previous inspection report from April 2009 indicated that bare-handed contact with food by food handlers was a concern at the McDonalds in Milan, Illinois.
Our law firm is representing people sickened in this outbreak and has represented people sickened in similar hepatitis A outbreaks linked to restaurant food handlers.
“Hepatitis A outbreaks involving restaurants are all too common. They usually involve failure to train and supervise employees regarding proper hand washing,” stated Attorney Fred Pritzker.
This outbreak could have been prevented in one of three ways:
- Frequent and adequate hand washing
- The use of gloves when touching food
- Hepatitis A immunizations for all employees who handle food
Source: Hepatitis A Outbreak Summary, Rock Island, Illinois, June-August 2009, Division of Infectious Disease, Illinois Department of Public Health, October 30, 2009.
Labels: hep outbreak, hepatitis A, hepatitis lawyer
McDonalds Hep Outbreak Was Foreshadowed

The medical center that diagnosed a McDonald's employee with hepatitis A failed to make a timely report of the infectious disease to public health officials -- a "human error" that contributed to the Illinois McDonald's hepatitis outbreak in the Quad City border metropolis.
Guse said the Milan McDonald's received a letter from the health department in February that warned of a possible outbreak of foodborne illness if compliance wasn't forthcoming. Inspections of the restaurant in 2008 found deficiencies that prompted health officials to intensify the schedule of inspections in 2009. The local health department also rapped the Milan McDonald's for failing to respond to information demands in a timely fashion.
Labels: Campylobacter, class action lawsuit, hepatitis lawyer, Milan
McDonalds Hepatitis Outbreak was Avoidable
By Fred PritzkerI represent survivors of foodborne illness including clients sickened with hepatitis A at restaurants.
Hep A is an acute liver disease caused by the hepatitis A virus (HAV) that lasts from a few weeks to several months. Although it does not lead to chronic infection, it causes significant and debilitating symptoms and requires precautionary measures to prevent its spread to family members.
In a restaurant setting, Hep A is transmitted by consuming food or drinks contaminated with fecal matter. This usually occurs when a restaurant worker sickened with Hep A goes to work while still contagious and fails to properly wash his/her hands while preparing food served to paying customers like you.
In most cases, this is an utterly preventable disease. Workers exhibiting symptoms of Hep A should not work until cleared by a physician. Restaurant managers should not allow symptomatic employees on the premises.
Thus, it's particularly distressing to see reports of a Hep A outbreak involving a Milan, Illinois, McDonald's in which an estimated 10,000 patrons have been potentially exposed to the virus. Worse, according to WQAD-TV of the Quad Cities, a McDonald's employee diagnosed with hepatitis A told her manager at McDonald's of her diagnosis on June 25. Despite this, the restaurant giant claims it didn't learn of the diagnosis until July 13, following which the restaurant was closed.
I've recently written about proposed new food safety rules designed to reduce the incidence and severity of foodborne illness outbreaks -- including this one it would seem. Generally speaking they are not due to bad policies and procedures but rather gross failure to properly enforce them.
McDonald's is one of the best run food companies in the world. Its employee handbooks specifically instruct employees to:
- Call in if you are ill. Don't come to work when you are sick, such as a with a severe cold or you are suffering from diarrhea or vomiting. You are at a higher risk for transferring bacteria to food or others.
- If you start to feel ill, tell your manager. Good health is important throughout your shift. You are as at a higher risk for transferring bacteria to food or others.
But all the best policies and procedures won't make a restaurant safe if managers ignore the rules or fail to enforce them. Sadly, the only real incentive is public approbation and financial loss. Apparently, the health of customers is not incentive enough.
Labels: Campylobacter, class action lawsuit, hep outbreak, hepatitis A, hepatitis lawyer, Milan
Illinois Hepatitis Outbreak and McDonalds Closing

Rock Island health officials, along with the Illinois Department of Public Health have warned the public about an outbreak of hepatitis A, but the cause is still under investigation. Officials have said there have been 19 cases, including 13 in Rock Island County, where the Milan McDonald's is located
National food safety law firm Pritzker Olsen Attorneys is deeply experienced in hepatitis A restaurant outbreaks. Restaurants
are responsible for any injury caused by the food they serve. Even if a specific
food handler caused the harm, the restaurant as a whole is still
responsible.
Hepatitis A contamination is frequently caused by an infected restaurant worker who hasn't properly washed his or her hands after going to the bathroom. It is spread through feces. But an outbreak of hepatitis A also can be caused by contaminated products. For example, in a major hepatitis A outbreak involving Chi-Chi's Restaurant, the cause was green onions.
In the Illinois hepatitis A outbreak, a parent of one of the workers at the Milan McDonald's told WQAD.com of the Quad Cities that her daughter and other employees of the McDonald's on U.S. 67 in Milan were screened for hepatitis A Thursday -- the same day that the restaurant closed early without explanation.
Media reports said workers could be seen through the windows doing an.
interior cleaning of the restaurant. Arnie Hanson patronized the
Illinois McDonald's restaurant in Milan Thursday and was one of the last
customers served before the store was closed and locked.
Hanson told WQAD.com that he was angry no one at McDonald's told him of
the possible threat of a McDonald's hepatitis A outbreak. "They put my
daughter in jeopardy along with the public and other people,'' Hanson
told the news reporter
As in the 2007 Pizza Ranch restaurant hepatitis A outbreak, Pritzker Olsen is accepting cases from the Illinois hepatitis outbreak. To contact a hepatitis lawyer at our firm, call 1-888-377-8900 (Toll Free) or write to us online for a free case consultation. The form is simple and easy and a lawyer is ready to assist.
Our firm thoroughly understands what it takes to file a successful hepatitis A lawsuit involving a restaurant. We have collected tens of millions of dollars for victims of food poisoning and are one of the leading national foodborne illness litigation law firms now in practice.
Labels: hep outbreak, hepatitis A, hepatitis lawyer, Illinois hepatitis, Milan
Food Poisoning Lawyer Fred Pritzker has appeared on national television and has been quoted by national publications, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Associated Press and Lawyers USA. He has been named a "Super Lawyer" by Law and Politics magazine. He is also listed in the current edition of The Best Lawyers in America. To contact Fred Pritzker about a food poisoning lawsuit or food safety advocacy, please call 1-888-377-8900 (toll free) or submit the firm's free consultation form.
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