In 2006, I suffered from E. coli and HUS due to the spinach outbreak that infected 199 people in 26 states. An elderly woman from Wisconsin was one of the three confirmed deaths associated with the outbreak.
I spent about two and a half weeks’ total in the hospital. Eight of those days were spent in the ICU with failed kidneys and other parts of my body breaking down. Initially, the doctors weren’t sure if I was going to survive it. Fortunately, I was able to recover enough to be released from the hospital and continue my recovery at home.
As part of the media coverage for the 2006 outbreak, I was asked by CBS News to speak about my experience. That was a little surreal. A reporter and camera person came to my home in Milwaukee to speak with me, and soon enough I was telling my story on national news.
Another person who I believe was interviewed for the story was Barb Kowalczyk. After the CBS segment aired, Barb had gotten in contact with me and told me about Stop Foodborne Illness (It was still called S.T.O.P./Safe Tables at the time). I didn’t know such an organization even existed. When contacting them I received a lot of support and comfort from others who truly understand how horrifying it is to experience foodborne illness – not only for the individual facing the ordeal, but also the devastation it can cause to families as well.
Currently I am a stay at home mom to an (almost) 3-year-old. It’s amazing to watch our son grow, learn, laugh, and experience life. (It’s also really, really exhausting some days!) My husband and I have been married just over seven years, and sometimes we comment on how much our lives have changed in just the last few years together.
For myself, I cannot believe how much has changed in my own life since suffering from E. coli. When I had gotten sick, I was a 24-year-old graduate student living in a studio apartment with my cat. I never could have dreamed of having the wonderful family and life that I have today. Even though so much has changed, I will always live with my horrible E. coli experience. The experience has shaped not only how I eat, but how I prepare food for our family, what foods we buy at the store, as well as what foods we avoid. Especially after hearing about the latest outbreak or recall.
March 2018
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