Bloomberg News 03-29-07 Don't Buy Easter Chicks, U.S. Says, Citing Salmonella (Update2) By Elizabeth Lopatto March 29 (Bloomberg) -- People who buy baby chicks for their children for Easter may also be carrying a dangerous visitor home -- salmonella, which causes diarrhea, fever and stomach pain. Salmonella outbreaks in Michigan, Nebraska and Oregon were tied to baby chicks in a study published today in the Centers for Disease Control's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The Nebraska outbreak, which involved children in a daycare center, occurred when a parent brought in chicks. Baby birds, including chicks, ducklings, goslings and turkey, have long been linked to salmonella outbreaks. The bacteria from the chicks' intestines contaminate the animals' environments and feathers. Handling the chicks can pass the disease, which infects an estimated 1.4 million people in the U.S. annually, to humans. ``Not everybody realizes that baby chicks can have salmonella,'' said Radford Davis, an associate professor of public health at Iowa State University in Ames, in a telephone interview today. He was not affiliated with the report. ``When you take into account old folks, young folks, people on chemotherapy, or receiving an organ transplant--that's about twenty percent of the U.S. population at elevated risk.'' ``Children can be exposed to bacteria by simply holding, cuddling, or kissing the birds,'' according to a CDC web site. ``Persons who purchase baby poultry remain unaware that contact with these birds put them and others'' at risk for getting sick from salmonella, the authors of the paper said. `Easter Special' A box of 15-day-old chickens, not sorted by sex, costs between $30 and $34.50 at Ohio-based Mt. Healthy Hatcheries, Inc. Their ``Easter Special'' of six ducklings with a feeder, waterer, heat lamp, heat bulb, five pounds of feed and a vitamin pack costs $75.00, according to their Web site. In the Nebraska outbreak, which occurred in May 2006, three of four children who tested positive for salmonella were confirmed to have handled baby chicks. The fourth child had opportunity to do so, though it was not clear whether there was direct contact, the CDC report said. The Michigan outbreak was May, 2006, and involved 12 patients. In Oregon, four patients were infected with salmonella in March and May, 2006. ``Especially under the age of five, kids put their fingers in their mouths, don't wash their hands after they touch things, and their immune systems are not as fully primed as adults','' putting them at elevated risk for salmonella infection, Davis said. Most at Risk Salmonella infection caused ``thousands of hospitalizations and hundreds of deaths,'' according to an editorial note that accompanied the paper. Young children, older adults, and those with compromised immune systems are at risk for the most severe infections. The CDC recommends that no one purchase live animals as Easter gifts. Further, children under age five shouldn't be allowed to handle any live young birds. Should children touch a baby bird or its environment, the CDC recommends that they wash their hands immediately. To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Lopatto in New York at elopatto@bloomberg.net