Three people had died and nine were hospitalized as of yesterday morning after eating millet dumplings that might have contained toxic pesticides.
On Tuesday evening, after consuming millet dumplings she had made earlier, a woman surnamed Tseng (曾) in Taitung County’s Jinfong Township (金峰) developed convulsions and was taken to Mackay Memorial Hospital Taitung Branch, where she died.
Later that evening, about 30 friends and family gathered to pay their respects, with some of them eating the same millet dumplings, which contained snails, bamboo shoots and taro.
Photo copied by Huang Ming-tang, Taipei Times
Twelve of the attendees began seeking medical attention starting at about 3am for vomiting and convulsions.
Six of them lost consciousness on the way to a hospital, and by 7am, two had died and nine were in hospitals receiving treatment.
As many people exhibited the same symptoms, family members suspected it might have been food poisoning and sent the remaining millet dumplings and other food to a hospital for testing.
Tseng emitted a strange smell when she was admitted at about 9pm, Mackay Memorial Hospital Taitung Branch emergency room director Liu En-jui (劉恩睿) told reporters.
Liu said he asked the family if it might have been food poisoning, but they said it was unlikely and suspected it was an age-related illness.
Six more people came to the Mackay Hospital branch throughout the night and two of them exhibited the same smell, causing doctors to suspect food poisoning, he said.
It appeared to be a neurotoxin, potentially an organophosphate used in pesticides or another type found naturally in plants, he said, adding that those affected had constricted pupils and were trembling, with body stiffness and secretions from the mouth and nose.
Taitung County police yesterday morning visited the village where the woman had lived and questioned the man who had collected the snails.
County health officials have also visited Tseng’s family and hospitals to gather samples and the remaining dumplings.
Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Deputy Director-General Philip Lo (羅一鈞) said that a CDC epidemiologist and a Taipei Veterans General Hospital toxicologist were yesterday afternoon to join the Taitung Public Health Bureau’s investigation.
Taiwan Medical University Hospital Department of Forensic Medicine and the Taiwan Poison Control Center at the Taipei Veterans General Hospital were testing specimens from the deceased to identify the cause of death, Lo said.
Investigators were focused on toxins and not infectious diseases because the symptoms manifested quicker than most pathogen’s incubation period, he said.
Taipei Veterans General Hospital Department of Occupational Medicine and Clinical Toxicology head Yang Chen-chang (楊振昌) said he suspected the dumplings’ leaf wrappings might have contained a harmful substance utilized as a pesticide, but added that no conclusion could be drawn until samples from the incident were tested.
One of the critically ill people showed symptoms consistent with poisoning by organophosphate or carbamic acid-based pesticides, including increased secretions, respiratory failure, slow heartbeat and loss of consciousness, he said.
The substances are frequently applied to protect Trichodesma calycosum plants, the leaves of which were used in the traditional millet dish, to kill snails or slugs, he said, adding that the victims had reported that the wrappings had a strange smell.
The possibility that cyanide had been used as a pesticide had not been ruled out, Yang added.
Metaldehyde, a substance local residents said they used to exterminate snails, was provisionally ruled out as the cause of death. as it lacked the lethality of the substance that caused the incident, he said.
Jimsonweed, a poisonous plant, had been inadvertently used as a wrapping for millet dumplings before, but no one had died from such incidents, he said, adding that the possibility of foul play has not been excluded.
‘NO SECURITY RISK’: The Railway Bureau reassured the public that the technicians’ activities were limited to technical guidance and did not involve sensitive systems The Railway Bureau yesterday said it had invited eight Chinese technicians to assist with an airport MRT construction project. The bureau issued the confirmation after an Internet user said Chinese nationals had entered the construction zone of Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport’s Terminal 3 project. They asked why “individuals from an enemy state” were allowed access to such a major national infrastructure project, which raised serious concerns over Taiwan’s industrial safety, sensitive systems and information security. The bureau’s Northern Region Engineering Branch Office said subcontractor Taiwan Handle Industrial Co (台灣手把工業) of the Taoyuan airport MRT’s “Contract No. CU05 Project A14 Station Civil, MEP &
A US uncrewed surface vessel (USV) encountered multiple Chinese warships during an autonomous transit of the Taiwan Strait, US defense company Seasats said in a statement on Wednesday. Seasats announced that a Lightfish USV had completed the first autonomous transit of the Taiwan Strait. Over five days, the USV traversed the entire length of the Strait while constantly monitoring surface vessel traffic, the company said. The Lightfish encountered multiple Chinese warships, one of which was a Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) Type 056 corvette, it said. The Chinese vessels were operating “well within Taiwan’s exclusive economic zone without transmitting their identity via the
‘BOOMING’: ’ The number of partners we have here is incredible. You can see from their stock prices. They’re doing so well, they’re so happy,’ Jensen Huang said Nvidia Corp’s spending in Taiwan has ballooned to about US$150 billion a year, 10 times the US$10 billion to US$15 billion the company spent five years ago, Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said yesterday, suggesting Taiwan’s strategic importance in the global artificial intelligence (AI) supply chain. “Taiwan is the epicenter of the AI revolution. This is where the chips come, packaging comes. This is where the systems are made. This is where AI supercomputers were created,” Huang said at a meeting for the company’s employees in Beitou-Shilin Technology Park (北投士林科技園區) in Taipei, the planned site of Nvidia’s Taipei headquarters. “Taiwan
GREATER REACH? Auto parts and wood products would face tariffs of up to 15%, matching those targeting the EU, Japan and South Korea, Vice Premier said The US has announced that preferential tariff treatment for Taiwan’s non-semiconductor Section 232 goods would take effect retroactively from May 1, the Executive Yuan said yesterday. The US government yesterday posted a notice on the Federal Register’s public inspection Web site previewing tariff concessions for Taiwan under a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on Taiwan-US investment after two months of negotiations. The MOU signed on Jan. 15 stipulated three major preferential tariff arrangements: a 15 percent “reciprocal” tariff rate for Taiwan without stacking most-favored nation (MFN) rates; preferential Section 232 treatment for semiconductors and related products; and preferential Section 232 treatment for non-semiconductor