Cyclosporiasis outbreak tied to produce spreads in 34 states
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Summary
NBC News reports on a cyclosporiasis outbreak causing explosive diarrhea, nausea, and fatigue across the U.S., linked to contaminated fresh produce. It states nearly 7,000 illnesses, 34 states affected, 141 hospitalizations, Michigan officials pointing to lettuce or salad greens, no recalls yet, and standard prevention advice including cooking produce or buying whole heads of lettuce. The segment cites CDC data, Michigan DHHS findings, and notes the agency made cyclosporiasis tracking optional in its FoodNet surveillance last year. It mentions treatment with Bactrim and that symptoms can persist weeks if untreated.
Editorial Assessment
The report accurately conveys CDC-confirmed figures (1,645 domestic cases with 141 hospitalizations across 34 states as of July 13) and broader state-reported totals that approach the 'nearly 7,000' aggregate when pending cases are included. Michigan's lettuce/salad-greens link and the 2025 FoodNet change are corroborated by official sources. Minor imprecision exists in the total-case phrasing and lack of distinction between confirmed versus probable counts, but the broadcast avoids exaggeration. Viewers receive practical advice but limited detail on traceback progress or why no recalls have occurred despite the scale.
Key Moments
Nearly 7,000 people sick with cyclosporiasis; 34 states and 141 hospitalized per CDC
CDC July 13 update: 1,645 confirmed domestic cases + >5,100 pending; 34 states; exactly 141 hospitalized among confirmed.
Michigan DHHS: early findings point to lettuce or salad greens as potential source
MDHHS statements and multiple outlets confirm this assessment as of July 13-14, 2026.
CDC scaled back FoodNet surveillance last July, making cyclosporiasis tracking optional
FoodNet changes effective July 2025 removed required Cyclospora surveillance, confirmed by CDC and reporting.
No recalls issued; FDA working with states; source hard to pinpoint
Consistent with ongoing investigations and absence of announced recalls as of mid-July 2026.