Introduction of Hazards-Preparation, Consumption, and the .ppt
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1、Introduction of Hazards: Preparation, Consumption, and the Chain of TransmissionPathogen Reduction Dialogue Panel 1 May 6, 2002 Georgetown University Conference Center,Robert V Tauxe, M.D., M.P.H. Foodborne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch,DBMD, NCID Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,Atlanta,
2、GA,Each year an estimated 76 million cases 1 in four Americans gets a foodborne illness each year 1 in 1000 Americans is hospitalized each year $6.5 billion in medical and other costsPrevention depends on efforts from farm to table to reduce contamination of food,Public health burden of foodborne di
3、sease,Infection with a variety of different pathogensIllness may occur in large focal outbreaks Most illness is “sporadic”: either individual cases or part of unrecognized dispersed outbreaksReservoir: locus of sustained transmission and persistence Some have a human reservoir: Shigella, hepatitis A
4、, Norwalk virusSome have an animal reservoir: Salmonella, Campylobacter,E. coli O157:H7, Listeria, Vibrio, Yersinia, ToxoplasmaOften transmitted by several different pathways Specific foods, water, direct contact with animals, direct contact with humans,Foodborne diseases,Major identified foodborne
5、pathogens, United States circa 2002,Bacterial: Bacillus cereus Brucella Campylobacter* Clostridium botulinum Clostridium perfringens E. coli O157:H7* E. coli, non-O157 STEC* E. coli, other diarrheagenic* Listeria monocytogenes* Salmonella Typhi Salmonella non-typhoidal Shigella Staphylococcus Strept
6、ococcus Vibrio cholerae, toxigenic*,Bacterial, continued: Vibrio vulnificus* Vibrio, other* Yersinia enterocolitica*Parasitic: Cryptosporidium* Cyclospora* Giardia* Toxoplasma* TrichinellaViral: Norwalk-like viruses* Rotavirus* Astrovirus* Hepatitis A,* Recognized as foodborne in last 30 years,Prion
7、s*,Major identified foodborne pathogens, United States circa 2002,Bacterial: Bacillus cereus Brucella Campylobacter* Clostridium botulinum Clostridium perfringens E. coli O157:H7* E. coli, non-O157 STEC* E. coli, other diarrheagenic* Listeria monocytogenes* Salmonella Typhi Salmonella non-typhoidal
8、Shigella Staphylococcus Streptococcus Vibrio cholerae, toxigenic*,Bacterial, continued: Vibrio vulnificus* Vibrio, other* Yersinia enterocolitica*Parasitic: Cryptosporidium* Cyclospora* Giardia* Toxoplasma* TrichinellaViral: Norwalk-like viruses* Rotavirus* Astrovirus* Hepatitis A,* Recognized as fo
9、odborne in last 30 years (Zoonotic reservoir),Prions*,The new foodborne zoonoses,The infected food animal looks healthy Sustained or repeated infections in animals Contaminated food looks normal Pathogen survives standard processingand preparation Missed by current inspection strategies Spreads sile
10、ntly around the globe Requires new control strategiesMore to be discovered,The chain of production from farm to table:A generic scenario,Production,Processing,Final preparation and cooking,Farm, Feedlot, Fishing site,Slaughter Plant, Cannery, Packer, Food Factory,Final Kitchen: commercial, instituti
11、onal or domestic,The chain of production from farm to table:A generic scenario,Production,Processing,Final preparation and cooking,Farm, Feedlot, Fishing site,Slaughter Plant, Cannery, Packer, Food Factory,Final Kitchen: commercial, institutional or domestic,What happens in kitchens?,1993-1997: Amon
12、g 2,751 foodborne outbreaks reported to CDC, 43% in restaurants/delis/etc Contributing kitchen factors noted 73% - poor holding temperatures38% - poor personal hygiene21% - inadequate cooking1980-1995: New York State: 1806 outbreaks: 32% - contaminated ingredients 24% - consumption of raw/lightly he
13、ated 23% - food from unapproved source 23% - ill food handler,Outbreaks are multi-factorial events,Problems in food handling are often reported in foodborne outbreak investigationsProbably frequent in kitchens where an outbreak has not occurredTraining focused on better food handling important, so i
14、s handwashingReducing the arrival of the pathogens into kitchen is also important,Introduction of pathogens into food during final preparation: what are the sources?,Foods arrive contaminated(particularly raw foods of animal origin)Food handler infected with the pathogenOther environmental sources,W
15、hen contaminated raw foods of animal origin arrive in the kitchen,Handling may further amplify riskEasily cross-contaminate other foodsvia hands, utensils, surfacesA direct risk if undercooked (FoodNet 2000 survey) Raw oysters - 2.5% in preceding month Pink ground beef - 26% Runny egg dish - 27% 3%
16、use a thermometer for burgers,When an ill food handler arrives in the kitchen,They work, because they have no paid sick leaveThey may be shedding the organism in feces or vomitLapses in personal hygiene can contaminate foodParticularly for pathogens with human reservoir: Norwalk-like viruses, Shigel
17、la, hepatitis AOccasionally for pathogens with animal reservoirs: Salmonella, E. coli O157, Campylobacter,Food may be contaminated by other environmental sources,Food prepared or consumed around animals Petting zoos, county fairs, “barn dances” Large E. coli O157 outbreak, U Wisconsin, 2001 34 cases
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