Fast Company

1 The Outbreak

SEARCHING FOR THE CULPRIT

On October 19, 2015, Jared Hines, a 21-year-old college senior, went to a Chipotle restaurant near downtown Seattle for dinner. He ordered a chicken burrito with white cilantro-lime rice, black and pinto beans, pico de gallo, corn salsa, cheese, and lettuce. He scarfed it down and thought nothing more of it.

Four days later, pain seized his 6-foot-3, 160-pound body. A 101-degree fever. Vomiting. Diarrhea. Then things got worse: “I had blood pouring out of me from every orifice,” he tells me.

His parents rushed him to the hospital, where doctors, assuming he was reacting to a recent bout of mononucleosis, prescribed antibiotics.

Hines remembers coming to in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fast Company

Fast Company1 min read
27 Mill Industries
A MAJOR CLImate change culprit is hiding in your kitchen: food scraps. Apple cores, carrot tops, and uneaten bits of dinner are a surprisingly potent source of emissions, spewing methane as they decompose in landfills. Mill, a stylish garbage bin (re
Fast Company2 min read
13 usafacts
FACTS ARE CRUCIAL to effective government. How can voters assess the efficacy of lawmakers if they don't have reliable data? How can representatives understand what their constituents need if they don't know the details of, say, those citizens' stand
Fast Company12 min read
08 for Whom The Bell Tolls
FOR SHOWING THE WORLD THAT TACOS ARE A STATE OF MIND NO ONE REALLY KNOWS who first came up with the idea of Taco Tuesday. One of the earliest references can be found in a newspaper ad for El Paso, Texas's White Star Cafeteria from Monday, October 16,

Related Books & Audiobooks