Audio By Carbonatix
The Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) has confirmed food poisoning as the cause of recent foodborne disease outbreak among some students at the Accra High School.
The Agency further cited Nontyphoidal Salmonellosis as the suspected disease condition. Nontyphoidal salmonellae are gram-negative bacteria that primarily cause gastroenteritis, bacteremia, and focal infection. Symptoms may be diarrhea, high fever with prostration, or symptoms of focal infection.
On December 3, 2019, the FDA took over investigations into a case where some 35 students were admitted at the Adabraka Polyclinic for complaining of stomach discomfort after eating food served by the school.
Doctors at the facility after a series of laboratory tests, concluded that food poisoning was the cause of the students’ condition.
The students have since been treated and discharged.
Preliminary findings by the FDA revealed that the affected students consumed Kenkey, fish and fresh pepper sauce prepared under the school feeding programme at the school, which they suspect could be the causative diet.
Headmaster of the Accra High School, Kwabena Baidoo, had also assured parents and the general public of the safety of their children as calm had been restored to campus.
Following the conclusion of a two-week investigation, the authority on Thursday revealed that “post-processing contamination might have occurred prior to serving and during the serving of the fried fish. That is the fish might have been contaminated with salmonella. Nontyphoidal Salmonellosis is the suspected disease condition. The suspected food sample was not available for sampling and testing.”
The report further stated that the kitchen staff and students did not have access to soap and running water for handwashing prior to the outbreak. Thus, some students washed their hands without soap while others washed in the communal bowl with the soapy water.
“The contamination, therefore, might have occurred due to these poor handwashing practices among the kitchen staff and the students,” FDA added.
It has however ensured that some measures such as education of the kitchen staff on good handwashing practices and equipping the facility with ‘veronica bucket’ and soap to be used for handwashing.
A follow-up inspection is also scheduled to be conducted by the FDA to ensure that the recommendations are complied with to prevent the reoccurrence of the outbreak in the school.
Latest Stories
-
Milo U13 Champs: Ahafo’s Adrobaa set for thrilling final with Franko International of Western North
1 hour -
Ghana’s HIV crisis: Stigma drives new infections as AIDS Commission bets on AI and six-month injectables
3 hours -
First Ladies unite in Accra to champion elimination of mother-to-child HIV, Syphilis, and Hepatitis B transmission
3 hours -
US Supreme Court agrees to hear case challenging birthright citizenship
4 hours -
Notorious Ashaiman robber arrested in joint police operation
4 hours -
Judge sets key dates after video evidence hurdle in Nana Agradaa appeal case
5 hours -
Who are favourites to win the 2026 World Cup?
5 hours -
Galamsey crisis spiritual, not just economic; Pulpit and policy intervention needed – Prof. Frimpong-Manso
5 hours -
We will come after you – Muntaka warns online fearmongers
6 hours -
Forestry office attack: Suspected gang leader arrested, two stolen cars recovered
6 hours -
How Asamoah Gyan reacted after Ghana was paired with England, Croatia, and Panama for the 2026 World Cup
7 hours -
Ghana Armed Forces opens 2025/2026 intake for military academy
7 hours -
Prime Insight: OSP vs. Kpebu and petitions to remove EC boss to dominate discussions this Saturday
7 hours -
Multimedia’s David Andoh selected among international journalists covering PLANETech 2025 in Israel
9 hours -
Gov’t prioritising real action over slogans – Kwakye Ofosu
10 hours
