Close Menu
  • Food Poisoning
    • Symptoms
    • Prevention
    • Treatment
    • Causes
  • Pathogens
    • Botulism
    • Campylobacter
    • E. coli
    • Cyclospora
    • Norovirus
    • Hepatitis A
    • Salmonella
    • Listeria
    • Shigella
  • Food Safety
    • How to wash your hands
    • Food Safty And The Holidays
  • Legal
    • Can I sue for Food Poisoning?
    • E. coli Lawyer
      • E. coli Lawsuit
    • Salmonella Lawyer
      • Salmonella Lawsuit
    • Botulism Lawyer
    • Cyclospora Lawyer
    • Shigella Lawyer
    • Hepatitis A Lawyer
  • Outbreaks and Recalls
  • Connect With A Lawyer
What's Hot

Do You Meal Prep on the Weekends for the Week Ahead? Safety Tips to Avoid Food Poisoning During Batch Meal Preparation

January 12, 2026

Harnessing Our Microbial Allies: How Probiotics Wage War on Foodborne Pathogens Like Salmonella and E. Coli

January 12, 2026

Peace by Chocolate Recalls Pistachio-Containing Chocolates Amid Salmonella Contamination Concern

January 10, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
  • About
  • Contact Us
Food Poisoning NewsFood Poisoning News
  • Home
  • Food Poisoning
    • What is Food Poisoning?
      • Symptoms
      • Causes
      • Prevention
      • Treatment
      • Statistics
    • Pathogens
      • Botulism
      • Campylobacter
      • E. coli
      • Hepatitis A
      • Shigella
      • Norovirus
      • Salmonella
      • Cyclospora
      • Listeria
  • Food Safety
    • How to wash your hands
    • Food Safty And The Holidays
  • Legal
    • Salmonella Lawyer
      • Salmonella Lawsuit
    • E. coli Lawyer
      • E. coli Lawsuit
    • Cyclospora Lawyer
    • Shigella Lawyer
    • Hepatitis A Lawyer
    • Botulism Lawyer
  • Outbreaks and Recalls
Food Poisoning NewsFood Poisoning News
Home»Food Poisoning News»Maryland Cyclospora Outbreak: A State Under Attack
Food Poisoning News

Maryland Cyclospora Outbreak: A State Under Attack

Tony Coveny, Ph.DBy Tony Coveny, Ph.DJuly 30, 2019No Comments3 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Reddit

Maryland Cyclospora Outbreak: Maryland Not Immune to Multi-State Cyclospora Outbreak

Like every state, Maryland has a nickname or two. The recent Cyclospora outbreak hitting Maryland aggressively, calls to mind the nickname ‘The Old-Line State’ lending to a Revolutionary event wherein Marylanders heroically held off a much larger British army, allowing General Washington to evacuate his troops. Now, I am not comparing a parasitic infection to that of a British invasion, yet, both require a degree of resiliency, wouldn’t you say? Especially considering that with 42 cases of this intestinal illness popping up in the first half this year, 37 of which have surfaced in the past 2 weeks. And, public health officials have not identified the cause.

There is a nation-wide uptick in the cases of Cyclospora this year. Dozens of states are experiencing cases linked to this one-cell parasite that invades the intestinal tract and causes a multitude of symptoms. Some clusters, sharing a geographic area, have been successfully linked to a specific food source and/or dining establishment. In these cases,

Maryland Cyclospora Outbreak - Not Immune to Multi-State
Food Safety Author Erika Beach, author of articles on Food Safety and Food Borne Pathogens

public health officials have been able to interview ill consumer and find similar behaviors, often leading to a single ingredient. This outcome has led to a public alert and typically a product recall. However, in the case of Maryland, the lab-tested and confirmed cases of Cyclospora have not resulted in a recall. And, with the broad reach of this parasite, typically associated with fresh produce of many different varieties, the challenge is real.

Cyclospora, this one-cell parasite, makes its way easily into a food source or water by way of contaminated feces. Once present, the food source or water will show no evidence of contamination, making detection impossible. Good hygiene, therefore, is paramount when handling and preparing food, especially fresh, imported fruits and vegetables. Washing hands with hot, soapy water before handling foods is equally important to washing the foods themselves. And, keeping surfaces, especially where food is prepared, cut and stored, disinfectants are important.

How Should Consumers be Handling the Maryland Cyclospora Outbreak?

Maryland consumers, while without the benefit of an outbreak source, can and should practice safe food handling and require it of dining establishments to help mitigate the exposure. Also, paying attention to public alerts from the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and Food & Drug Administration (FDA), especially as they investigate these cases, is key. Report illness and see a health professional immediately if you are experiencing symptoms such as weight loss accompanied by extreme diarrhea, vomiting, bloat, dehydration and fatigue. Reporting your illness not only helps you to get the right course of treatment to speed up recovery, but will potentially help keep other Marylanders out of harm’s way.

https://health.maryland.gov/newsroom/Pages/state-investigating-increase-in-cyclospora-infections.aspx

https://phpa.health.maryland.gov/pages/CYCLOSPORIASIS.aspx

https://www.baltimoresun.com/health/bs-hs-cyclospora-20170726-20190726-eow7a7l47bfhxjeofvsmwsh3va-story.html

https://www.basilcyclosporalawyer.com/

 

https://ronsimonassociates.com/foodpoisoning/cyclospora-lawyer/

Maryland Cyclospora Outbreak Maryland Cyclospora Outbreak Lawsuit Lawyers
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Tony Coveny, Ph.D

Tony Coveny, has been practicing infectious disease litigation exclusively for more than a decade, settling cases against major agro-industrial companies, international suppliers, and domestic distributors and manufacturers. Tony Coveny, alongside Ron Simon, has tried cases against restaurants, distributors, national manufacturers, and foreign corporations to recover damages against their clients. From the main office in Houston, which he manages, he speaks to potential and current clients on a daily basis.

Related Posts

Do You Meal Prep on the Weekends for the Week Ahead? Safety Tips to Avoid Food Poisoning During Batch Meal Preparation

January 12, 2026

Wild Pathogens: How Wildlife Brings Foodborne Illness Like Salmonella and E. Coli from Field to Fork

January 9, 2026

The Hidden Dangers of Barbecue Season (Which is Approaching Faster Than You Think) and Undercooked Meat

January 8, 2026

Is It Safe to Eat Salmon or Steak That Is Cooked Rare or Medium Rare? What About Salmonella and E. coli?

January 8, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Attorney Advertisement
Ron Simon

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest food safety recall, outbreak, & investigation news.

Latest Posts

Do You Meal Prep on the Weekends for the Week Ahead? Safety Tips to Avoid Food Poisoning During Batch Meal Preparation

January 12, 2026

Harnessing Our Microbial Allies: How Probiotics Wage War on Foodborne Pathogens Like Salmonella and E. Coli

January 12, 2026

Peace by Chocolate Recalls Pistachio-Containing Chocolates Amid Salmonella Contamination Concern

January 10, 2026

Food Poisoning News is a website devoted to providing you with the most current information on food safety, dangerous pathogens, food poisoning outbreaks and outbreak prevention, and food poisoning litigation.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
Latest Posts

Do You Meal Prep on the Weekends for the Week Ahead? Safety Tips to Avoid Food Poisoning During Batch Meal Preparation

January 12, 2026

Harnessing Our Microbial Allies: How Probiotics Wage War on Foodborne Pathogens Like Salmonella and E. Coli

January 12, 2026

Peace by Chocolate Recalls Pistachio-Containing Chocolates Amid Salmonella Contamination Concern

January 10, 2026
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest food safety recall, outbreak, & investigation news.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
  • Home
© 2026 Food Poisoning News. Sponsored by Ron Simon & Associates a Houston, TX law firm. Powered by ArmaVita.
Our website and content are for informational purposes only. Food Poisoning News does not provide legal advice, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.