FSAI warn of recall specific batches of Western Brand Sage & Onion Cook in Bag Whole Chicken due to the possible presence of Salmonella.
Alert Summary dated Monday, 11th May 2026
Category 1: For Action Alert Notification: 2026.20 Product Identification: Please see table below. Batch Code Please see table below. Country Of Origin: Ireland
Message: Western Brand is recalling the below batches of its Sage & Onion Cook in Bag Whole Chicken due to the possible presence of Salmonella.
Product.
Pack Size.
Use by dates.
Batch Number.
ALDI
Butchers Selection Sage & Onion Cook in Bag Whole Chicken.
1600g
13th May 2026
26124-640
TESCO
Tesco Roast in Bag Sage & Onion Stuffed Whole Irish Chicken.
1500g.
13th May 2026; 14th May 2026;
26124-640 26125-206
Nature Of Danger: People infected with Salmonella typically develop symptoms between 12 and 36 hours after infection, but this can range between 6 and 72 hours. The most common symptom is diarrhoea, which can sometimes be bloody. Other symptoms may include fever, headache and abdominal cramps. The illness usually lasts 4 to 7 days. Diarrhoea can occasionally be severe enough to require hospital admission. The elderly, infants, and those with impaired immune systems are more likely to have a severe illness.
Action Required: Manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors, caterers & retailers: Retailers: Same are requested to remove the implicated batches from sale and display recall notices at point-of-sale. Consumers: Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated batches.
Pre-deceased by her husband Jim, brothers Mick, Paddy, Martin, Philip and Jimmy, sisters Kitty, Mary, Phyllis, Una and Ann; Mrs Cantwell passed away peacefully at her home, surrounded by her family.
Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving daughters Catherine (Quish), Nora (Ryan), Ann, Mary (Mcloughlin) and Bridget (Corrigan), sons Thomas and Michael, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, sons-in-law, daughter-in-law, sisters Sheila and Theresa, brother John, sisters-in-law, nephews, nieces, extended relatives, neighbours, many friends and carers
For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Cantwell, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.
The extended Cantwell and Fahey families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.
Note Please: Family flowers only. House strictly private on Wednesday morning.
A woman in her 40s has been seriously injured following a hit-and-run road traffic collision involving a vehicle and an e-bike in Co. Tipperary in the early hours of Saturday morning.
The incident occurred on the Fethard Road towards Killusty, Lisronagh, at approximately 2am on Saturday, May 9th. The woman, who was travelling on an e-bike, sustained serious but non-life-threatening injuries following the collision.
According to Gardaí, the driver of the vehicle involved failed to remain at the scene. Investigations into the incident are continuing.
Investigating Gardaí are appealing to anyone who may have witnessed the collision, or who was travelling on the Fethard Road between Fethard and Clonmel between 1:45am and 2:30am on Saturday morning, to come forward.
Road users with dash-cam footage or mobile phone recordings from the area during that timeframe are also being urged to make the material available to Garda investigators.
Anyone with information is asked to contact An Garda Síochána at Clonmel Garda Station Tel: 052 6177640, the Garda Confidential Line Tel: 1800 666 111, or indeed any Garda station nationwide.
The Medical Board of HSE Mid West has issued what it describes as an “unprecedented recommendation”to Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill, warning that risks to patient care at University Hospital Limerick remain “intolerable” and “unacceptable”.
The Board said the crisis at UHL is not new, but rather the result of years of underinvestment and insufficient acute hospital capacity across the Mid West region, which includes, North Tipperary, Limerick, and Clare. UHL remains the main acute hospital serving patients from North Tipperary, particularly from towns including Nenagh, Roscrea and surrounding communities, following the reconfiguration of emergency services in the region.
In its statement, the Medical Board warned that severe overcrowding, high trolley numbers, delayed admissions and exhausted frontline staff continue to place patients at risk on a daily basis. Doctors said emergency services are operating without the capacity required to safely meet growing demand from an ageing and expanding population.
Chairman of the Medical Board, consultant surgeon Mr Colin Peirce, said frontline clinicians and patient advocates have repeatedly warned for years that the Mid West lacks the acute hospital infrastructure needed to deliver safe and timely care. He stated that while staff continue to work under extraordinary pressure, “mitigation is not safety” and “corridor care is not acceptable healthcare”. He said patients are waiting too long for beds, treatment, privacy and dignity.
Four Immediate Demands: The Medical Board is calling on Government to urgently implement four key measures:
Establish a fully empowered HSE Mid West Development Board to drive delivery of the proposed new hospital project.
Guarantee a full acute hospital with at least 400 beds in Phase 1 and long-term capacity for at least 1,000 beds, alongside the new maternity hospital.
Provide emergency funding in 2026 to recruit additional consultants, nurses, NCHDs, allied health professionals and support staff.
Suspend HSE staffing ceilings and recruitment restrictions across the Mid West until patient safety risks are stabilised.
Delays Continue Despite HIQA Findings. The statement comes more than seven months after a HIQA review identified serious patient safety concerns linked to overcrowding and inadequate bed capacity at UHL. Doctors say many of those same conditions persist today. Although Government approved plans in late 2025 to expand healthcare capacity in the Mid West, including additional services and a second acute hospital strategy, clinicians say progress remains too slow. A 44-acre site in Raheen was secured earlier this year for expansion of services linked to UHL, but the promised Development Board has yet to be formally established.
Growing Pressure Across the Mid West. Doctors stressed that while hospitals in Nenagh, Ennis and St John’s continue to provide excellent care, they cannot compensate for the absence of sufficient acute inpatient and emergency capacity in the region.
For communities in North Tipperary, which rely heavily on UHL for emergency and specialist care, the ongoing crisis continues to raise serious concerns about access, waiting times and patient safety. The Medical Board concluded that the Mid West can no longer continue operating in “permanent crisis mode” and warned that further delays in expanding hospital capacity risk prolonging unsafe conditions for both patients and healthcare staff.
Pre-deceased by his cherished son Joey, father Maurice and sister Sandra, the passing of Mr Dee is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving children Ayla, Dylan, Melissa and Damon, grandchildren Kodie, Levi and Molly, mother Catherine (Cathy) Slattery, brothers Aaron and Aidan, sister-in-law Siobhán, nephews Aidan and Hunter, niece Isabella, extended relatives, neighbours and many friends.
Rest In Peace.
Funeral Arrangements.
The remains of Mr Dee will repose at Hugh Ryan’s Funeral Home, Slievenamon Road, Thurles, (Eircode E41 CP59), on Wednesday afternoon, May 13th from 5:00pm until 7:00pm same evening. A service of interment will take place in St Patrick’s Cemetery, Moyne Road, Lognafulla, Thurles, on Thursday afternoon, May 14th, at 1:00pm
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