نتایج جستجو برای: foodborne disease outbreak

تعداد نتایج: 1522960  

Journal: :Journal of food protection 2013
Craig W Hedberg

A foodborne illness outbreak happens when a group of people eats food that is contaminated with a sufficient dose of a disease-causing agent. Illness may result because the food is contaminated with an agent that can cause illness after a small number of organisms are consumed or because the food was mishandled in a way that allowed a large number of organisms to grow. Because restaurants bring...

Arie Hendrik Havelaar Bas Bokkers Brecht Devleesschauwer David C. Bellinger, Esther Brandon Felicia Wu Gabriel Adegoke Henk van Loveren Herman Gibb, Janine Ezendam Janis Baines John Pitt Julie Cliff Marcel Mengelers Marco Zeilmaker P. Michael Bolger Philippe Jean-Paul Verger Reza Afshari, Yan Liu

All people need food. Unsafe foods; however, may cause diseases ranging from diarrhea to cancer. Chemicals in food are a worldwide health concern. In 2006, the World Health Organization (WHO) organized a consultation on the global burden of foodborne diseases. Work to estimate this burden began in 2007 and was carried out by the WHO Foodborne Disease Burden Epidemiology Reference Group (FERG), ...

Ahdie Karbalaei Shabani, Alireza Jannani, Fares Najari, Hossein Masoumi, Khadijeh Ezoji, Mohammad Mehdi Soltan Dallal, Mohammad Reza Montazer Khorasan,

Background: Botulism is mostly caused by Clostridium botulinum neurotoxin which has been described as a bilateral symmetric descending flaccid paralysis. Preventing and responding to botulism outbreaks is a public health emergency. In this study, the disease is reported in a family. Methods: In a case series study, during an outbreak, four members of a family with symptoms including paralysis,...

2012
Chad R. Laing Yongxiang Zhang Matthew W. Gilmour Vanessa Allen Roger Johnson James E. Thomas Victor P. J. Gannon

Escherichia coli O104:H4 was associated with a severe foodborne disease outbreak originating in Germany in May 2011. More than 4000 illnesses and 50 deaths were reported. The outbreak strain was a typical enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) that acquired an antibiotic resistance plasmid and a Shiga-toxin 2 (Stx2)-encoding bacteriophage. Based on whole-genome phylogenies, the O104:H4 strain was mos...

Journal: :archives of pediatric infectious diseases 0
jalal mardaneh department of microbiology, school of medicine, gonabad university of medical sciences, gonabad, iranسازمان اصلی تایید شده: دانشگاه علوم پزشکی گناباد (gonabad university of medical sciences) mohammad mehdi soltan dallal food microbiology research center, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran; department of pathobiology, division of microbiology, school of public health, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran; food microbiology research center, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iranسازمان اصلی تایید شده: دانشگاه علوم پزشکی تهران (tehran university of medical sciences)

conclusions results showed that pif that is being consumed in iran is contaminated with this pathogen and can cause disease in infants; especially those hospitalized in neonatal intensive care units (nicus) and fed pif. the number of reported cases of cronobacter infections is very low, but nevertheless there has been a slight increase recently. while the reported cases worldwide are few, it ne...

2014
Maho Imanishi Karunya Manikonda Bhavini P. Murthy L. Hannah Gould

The number of foodborne disease outbreaks reported in the United States declined substantially in 2009, when the surveillance system transitioned from reporting only foodborne disease outbreaks to reporting all enteric disease outbreaks. A 2013 survey found that some outbreaks that would have been previously reported as foodborne are now reported as having other transmission modes.

Journal: :Communicable diseases intelligence quarterly report 2007
Kathleen Fullerton

In 2006, OzFoodNet sites reported 24,598 notifications of seven diseases or conditions that are commonly transmitted by food, representing an increase of 2.5% over the mean of the previous 5 years. The most frequently notified aetiological agents were Campylobacter (15,492 notifications) and Salmonella (8,331 notifications). Salmonella notifications increased in 2006 by 5.2% when compared to hi...

Journal: :Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2004
Timothy F Jones S N Bulens S Gettner R L Garman D J Vugia D Blythe M A Hawkins S S Monroe F J Angulo U D Parashar

BACKGROUND In 68% of foodborne disease outbreaks, no etiologic pathogen is identified. In two-thirds of outbreaks with no identified etiology, no stool specimens are submitted for testing. METHODS From April 2001 to March 2003, we pilot-tested use of prepackaged, self-contained stool specimen collection kits in 3 states, delivered to and from patients by courier or mail, to improve rates of s...

Journal: :New South Wales public health bulletin 2004
Martyn Kirk

Foodborne diseases cause significant morbidity and mortality in Australia and throughout the world. Outbreaks of foodborne disease often require investigators to collaborate across jurisdictional boundaries—even at times internationally. Notified cases of foodborne disease are only a small proportion of the total burden of foodborne disease affecting the community. Many pathogens that contamina...

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