Taco Bell removed menu items as Cyclospora cases surged, and guacamole was among the items tied to the change. The source text available here does not include the article body, only browser prompts and the headline.
For customers, the immediate effect is simple: the menu is already narrower than before, but the available text does not identify which locations are involved or how broad the removal is. The page text instead says, “Notifications can be managed in browser preferences” and “Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged in.”
Taco Bell and Cyclospora
The headline places the menu change against a rise in Cyclospora cases. That gives the report its public-health edge, but the source material provided here stops short of naming the removed items beyond guacamole or explaining whether the change is temporary or permanent.
The thin record matters because it leaves readers with one usable fact and little else. Taco Bell has already pulled menu items, but the excerpt does not say where the change applies, which stores are affected, or whether lettuce was removed along with guacamole.
Browser prompts at the page
What is actually visible in the source is a page with notification and login prompts, not a full report. The page tells readers that notifications can be managed in browser preferences and that refreshing the page or navigating elsewhere on the site will trigger automatic login.
So the practical takeaway is limited but direct: the headline reports a menu cut tied to Cyclospora, yet the text available here does not supply the operational details a customer would need before ordering. The unresolved issue is which items were removed and what prompted the change in specific terms.







