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Five dead after suspected food poisoning at French retirement home

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Five residents at a retirement home in southern France have died and around a dozen others are in a serious condition after a suspected case of mass food poisoning, officials said Monday.

Twenty-two people at the privately operated Cheneraie residence in Lherm, a town south of Toulouse, began showing symptoms including vomiting after dinner on Sunday, police said in a statement.

Four deaths were initially announced by officials, and a source close to the inquiry later told AFP that a fifth person had died.

About a dozen of the 82 residents at the site remain in serious condition.

The meals involved have been kept for analysis, the regional health agency said, and residents were being questioned about what they ate.

"We suspect food poisoning because these events occurred after the meal," deputy prosecutor Marie-Paule Demiguel told BFM television, adding that the kitchens at the residence would also be investigated.

The grand-daughter of one of the woman who died, aged 95, said she had been served a Perigord salad, a regional speciality that includes duck, ham and foie gras, a duck liver pate.

"I still have the menu in my handbag and I know they had Perigord salad last night. What could that mean? Could it be the foie gras? They're going to do an autopsy in any case," the woman told the Depeche du Midi newspaper.

The daughter of two other residents, who gave her name as Chantal, told journalists outside the home that "apparently the problem was with meals prepared specially for palliative care patients."

- Private operator -

The retirement home, open since 2006, operates under licence from the French government but is run by the private firm Korian, which claims to be the largest network of retirement homes in Europe, with over 800 sites in five countries, representing 78,000 beds.

On the Paris stock market, Korian shares were posting some of the biggest losses on Monday, down more than 7 percent at 36.38 euros

The company announced its acquisition of the retirement home in January from its previous operator Omega, a French company which operates 12 homes in France.

"We learned yesterday of these four deaths and illnesses, and that there is suspected food poisoning, with an investigation and analyses underway, and we won't have any comment while awaiting the results," Korian said in a statement.

"If food poisoning is determined, this situation nonetheless remains quite rare in a sector that is subject to strict oversight in terms of food security," the AD-PA association of retirement home directors said.

Several family members sought news of their relatives at the site Monday morning, and a team of psychologists were on hand.

A woman who declined to give her name said she came to check on her 84-year-old mother, who suffers from Alzheimer's.

"Thank God she's OK. I learned only this morning, and I was quite upset," she said.

The deaths come as the government is preparing a draft bill on financing the retirement of an ageing population of baby boomers, which is expected to require an additional nine billion euros ($10.1 billion) in the health budget by 2030.

Five residents at a retirement home in southern France have died and around a dozen others are in a serious condition after a suspected case of mass food poisoning, officials said Monday.

Twenty-two people at the privately operated Cheneraie residence in Lherm, a town south of Toulouse, began showing symptoms including vomiting after dinner on Sunday, police said in a statement.

Four deaths were initially announced by officials, and a source close to the inquiry later told AFP that a fifth person had died.

About a dozen of the 82 residents at the site remain in serious condition.

The meals involved have been kept for analysis, the regional health agency said, and residents were being questioned about what they ate.

“We suspect food poisoning because these events occurred after the meal,” deputy prosecutor Marie-Paule Demiguel told BFM television, adding that the kitchens at the residence would also be investigated.

The grand-daughter of one of the woman who died, aged 95, said she had been served a Perigord salad, a regional speciality that includes duck, ham and foie gras, a duck liver pate.

“I still have the menu in my handbag and I know they had Perigord salad last night. What could that mean? Could it be the foie gras? They’re going to do an autopsy in any case,” the woman told the Depeche du Midi newspaper.

The daughter of two other residents, who gave her name as Chantal, told journalists outside the home that “apparently the problem was with meals prepared specially for palliative care patients.”

– Private operator –

The retirement home, open since 2006, operates under licence from the French government but is run by the private firm Korian, which claims to be the largest network of retirement homes in Europe, with over 800 sites in five countries, representing 78,000 beds.

On the Paris stock market, Korian shares were posting some of the biggest losses on Monday, down more than 7 percent at 36.38 euros

The company announced its acquisition of the retirement home in January from its previous operator Omega, a French company which operates 12 homes in France.

“We learned yesterday of these four deaths and illnesses, and that there is suspected food poisoning, with an investigation and analyses underway, and we won’t have any comment while awaiting the results,” Korian said in a statement.

“If food poisoning is determined, this situation nonetheless remains quite rare in a sector that is subject to strict oversight in terms of food security,” the AD-PA association of retirement home directors said.

Several family members sought news of their relatives at the site Monday morning, and a team of psychologists were on hand.

A woman who declined to give her name said she came to check on her 84-year-old mother, who suffers from Alzheimer’s.

“Thank God she’s OK. I learned only this morning, and I was quite upset,” she said.

The deaths come as the government is preparing a draft bill on financing the retirement of an ageing population of baby boomers, which is expected to require an additional nine billion euros ($10.1 billion) in the health budget by 2030.

AFP
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