Updated
Updated · WCVB Boston · Jul 15
Massachusetts Logs 18 Cyclospora Cases, Tufts Doctor Sees No Repeat of Midwest's 3,000-Case Surge
Updated
Updated · WCVB Boston · Jul 15

Massachusetts Logs 18 Cyclospora Cases, Tufts Doctor Sees No Repeat of Midwest's 3,000-Case Surge

1 articles · Updated · WCVB Boston · Jul 15

Summary

  • Eighteen Cyclosporiasis cases were reported in Massachusetts from May 1 to July 1, but Tufts infectious-disease doctor Zoe Weiss said the state is unlikely to mirror the Midwest outbreak.
  • More than 3,000 cases have been reported in Michigan and Ohio, while Massachusetts health officials say 18 cases match the state's usual spring and summer levels.
  • Cyclospora spreads through contaminated fresh produce — including raspberries, bagged lettuce, cilantro, scallions, snow peas and basil — often tied to feces-contaminated irrigation water.
  • The outbreak is pushing precautions beyond hospitals: Taco Bell said it would remove some ingredients as investigators trace the source, while doctors warn diagnosis is difficult because symptoms can take weeks to appear.
  • State-level data suggest 2026 is already the worst U.S. year for reported Cyclospora cases, even as Massachusetts so far remains outside the hardest-hit zone.

Insights

A parasite has sickened thousands nationwide. Why can't health officials identify the contaminated food?
With new FDA water rules in effect, why is the U.S. facing its worst-ever parasitic outbreak?