Coverage always frames cyclosporiasis as a food safety story: contaminated basil and bad lettuce. I have a different diagnosis on this outbreak.

The CDC has confirmed 1,645 cases of the parasitic illness, though it is aware of more than 5,100 cases that still require further analysis to confirm they are cyclosporiasis.

A doctor explains how you can stay healthy and how to avoid getting cyclosporiasis amidst the increasing outbreak in America.

Over 800 cases of cyclosporiasis have been confirmed in more than 30 US states, with health officials investigating the source.

Michigan officials are looking into lettuce as a possible source

The intestinal illness that causes explosive diarrhea is extra prominent this summer.

Foods like bagged salad mixes, berries, basil and cilantro have been linked to past cyclosporiasis outbreak. See a full list for what to know.

Michigan health officials say their investigation suggests lettuce or salad greens as possible sources of the foodborne illness, but no specific food has been identified.

The CDC and states are investigating a surge of cyclosporiasis cases across the country. Specific states' cases are likely linked.

US health officials have not identified the source of contamination and are tracing foods linked to cases through the supply chain.

Officials are still searching for the source of the outbreak, prompting consumers to seek advice on social media about which foods to avoid.

Cases of cyclosporiasis — the foodborne illness that can cause prolonged bouts of watery diarrhea — continue to surge nationwide, raising questions about the partial dismantling…

“You cannot thin a system, defer the tools that would speed it up, and then wonder why the public is left guessing,” writes epidemiologist Katrine Wallace.

Nearly 7,000 cases of cyclosporiasis are either confirmed or under investigation in the US - the source is still unknown.

It took weeks for the CDC to issue a health advisory over the growing number of cyclosporiasis cases.

Here's what doctors say about produce, pools and reducing your risk.

The CDC scaled back its tracking of foodborne illnesses last year, but the program was never meant to detect outbreaks.

A recent outbreak of cyclosporiasis—a foodborne illness contracted from eating contaminated food, typically fresh produce—has impacted at least 34 states nationwide.

Coverage always frames cyclosporiasis as a food safety story: contaminated basil and bad lettuce. I have a different diagnosis on this outbreak.

There are steps you can take to reduce your risk during this foodborne outbreak