Public health experts suggest the current inability to identify the origin of the infections is a direct result of weakened surveillance infrastructure. David Freedman, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, noted that the CDC has largely abandoned the day-to-day monitoring essential for containing such outbreaks, forcing individual state departments to manage the crisis in isolation.
Contributing to the instability are staff reductions at the Department of Health and Human Services under Robert F. Kennedy Jr., alongside a policy change from July 2025 that rendered reporting of the parasite optional for the Foodborne Disease Active Surveillance Network. Omer Awan of the University of Maryland School of Medicine warned that without centralized tracking, contaminated food continues to circulate, fueling the spread of the disease.

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