نتایج جستجو برای: foodborne diseases food

تعداد نتایج: 1096562  

Journal: :BMC Public Health 2008
Andrea Nesbitt Shannon Majowicz Rita Finley Frank Pollari Katarina Pintar Barbara Marshall Angela Cook Jan Sargeant Jeff Wilson Carl Ribble Lewinda Knowles

BACKGROUND The demographics and lifestyles of Canadians are changing, thereby influencing food choices and food preparation in the home. Although different dietary practices are associated with increased risk of foodborne illness, our ability to evaluate food consumption trends and assess risks associated with foodborne illness is limited by lack of data on current eating habits and consumer fo...

2015

The overall burden of foodborne illness is unknown, in part because of under-reporting and limited surveillance. Although the morbidity associated with foodborne illness is lower than ever, public risk perception and an increasingly complex food supply chain contribute to uncertainty in the food system. This paper presents an agent-based model of a simple food safety system involving consumers,...

Journal: :Acta microbiologica Polonica 2003
Edward Siński

In the present paper some aspects of the biology and various factors influencing the potential for environmental contamination with protozoan parasites infective stages implicated in water and foodborne diseases are described. The major protozoan species that affect humans are Entamoeba histolytica, Acanthamoeba sp., Neagleria sp. Giardia intestinalis, Cryptosporidium parvum, Cyclospora cayetan...

2016
Tine Hald Willy Aspinall Brecht Devleesschauwer Roger Cooke Tim Corrigan Arie H. Havelaar Herman J. Gibb Paul R. Torgerson Martyn D. Kirk Fred J. Angulo Robin J. Lake Niko Speybroeck Sandra Hoffmann Srinand Sreevatsan

BACKGROUND The Foodborne Disease Burden Epidemiology Reference Group (FERG) was established in 2007 by the World Health Organization (WHO) to estimate the global burden of foodborne diseases (FBDs). This estimation is complicated because most of the hazards causing FBD are not transmitted solely by food; most have several potential exposure routes consisting of transmission from animals, by hum...

Journal: :Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis 2004
Robert L McMasters Ewen C Todd

Food safety objectives (FSOs) are established in order to minimize the risk of foodborne illnesses to consumers, but these have not yet been incorporated into regulatory policy. An FSO states the maximum frequency and/or concentration of a microbiological hazard in a food at the time of consumption that provides an acceptable level of protection to the public and leads to a performance criterio...

2017
A A Hill M Crotta B Wall L Good S J O'Brien J Guitian

Foodborne infection is a result of exposure to complex, dynamic food systems. The efficiency of foodborne infection is driven by ongoing shifts in genetic machinery. Next-generation sequencing technologies can provide high-fidelity data about the genetics of a pathogen. However, food safety surveillance systems do not currently provide similar high-fidelity epidemiological metadata to associate...

Journal: :Communicable diseases intelligence quarterly report 2013
Alexis Pillsbury May Chiew John Bates Vicky Sheppeard

Staphylococcal food poisoning is a common cause of foodborne illness. In Australia, since 2000, approximately 30% of foodborne Staphylococcus aureus outbreaks reported to OzFoodNet have been associated with foods prepared by commercial caterers. We conducted a retrospective cohort analysis of an outbreak of gastrointestinal illness among participants of an elite sporting event during which 22 i...

Journal: :Morbidity and mortality weekly report. Surveillance summaries 2013
L Hannah Gould Kelly A Walsh Antonio R Vieira Karen Herman Ian T Williams Aron J Hall Dana Cole

PROBLEM/CONDITION Foodborne diseases cause an estimated 48 million illnesses each year in the United States, including 9.4 million caused by known pathogens. Foodborne disease outbreak surveillance provides valuable insights into the agents and foods that cause illness and the settings in which transmission occurs. CDC maintains a surveillance program for collection and periodic reporting of da...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 1997
J. E. Collins

Foodborne illness of microbial origin is the most serious food safety problem in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that 79% of outbreaks between 1987 and 1992 were bacterial; improper holding temperature and poor personal hygiene of food handlers contributed most to disease incidence. Some microbes have demonstrated resistance to standard methods of prepa...

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