Microbiological Food Safety for Vulnerable People
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Importance and Main Hazards of Foodborne Disease
Pathogen | Estimated Mean Number of Illnesses | Estimated Mean Number of Hospitalizations | Hospitalization Rate (%) | Estimated Mean Number of Deaths | Case-Fatality Rate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Norovirus | 5,461,731 | 14,663 | 0.27 | 149 | 0.003 |
Salmonella spp. non-typhoidal | 1,027,561 | 19,336 | 1.88 | 378 | 0.037 |
Clostridium perfringens | 965,958 | 438 | 0.04 | 26 | 0.003 |
Campylobacter spp. | 845,024 | 8463 | 1.00 | 76 | 0.009 |
Staphylococcus aureus | 241,148 | 1064 | 0.44 | 6 | 0.002 |
E. coli (STEC) 0157 and non-O157 | 175,905 | 2409 | 1.37 | 20 | 0.01 |
Shigella spp. | 131,254 | 1456 | 1.11 | 10 | 0.008 |
Yersinia enterocolitica | 97,656 | 533 | 0.55 | 29 | 0.03 |
Toxoplasma gondii | 86,686 | 4428 | 5.11 | 327 | 0.38 |
Listeria monocytogenes | 1591 | 1455 | 91.45 | 255 | 16.03 |
Pathogen | Cases | Hospital Admissions | Hospitalization Rate (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Campylobacter | 280,400 | 562 | 0.20 |
Clostridium perfringens | 79,570 | 186 | 0.23 |
Norovirus | 74,100 | 332 | 0.45 |
Salmonella non-typhoidal | 33,130 | 2490 | 7.52 |
E. coli O157 | 9886 | 2233 | 22.59 |
Shigella | 1204 | 33 | 2.74 |
Listeria monocytogenes | 183 | All reported outbreaks were among patients who were hospitalized | |
Toxoplasma gondii * | >35,000 symptomatic | nr | nr |
Pathogen | Number of Confirmed Human Cases | Hospitalization Rate (%) | Reported Deaths | Case-Fatality Rate (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Campylobacter spp. | 214,779 | 43.6 | 56 | 0.05 |
Salmonella non-typhoidal | 82,694 | 36.0 | 59 | 0.14 |
Yersinia spp. | 6471 | 48.4 | 2 | 0.05 |
STEC | 6043 | 37.1 | 13 | 0.36 |
Listeria monocytogenes | 1763 | 99.1 | 191 | 15.6 |
3. Groups of Vulnerable People
Primary Immunodeficiency, Caused by a Genetic Defect in Some Component of the Immune System |
---|
Secondary immune deficiencies: |
Immunosuppressive drugs in organ transplantation |
Leukaemia |
HIV/AIDS |
Chemotherapy for cancer |
Radiotherapy for cancer |
Treatment with corticosteroids |
Treatment with inhibitors of tumour necrosis factor e.g. for rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease |
Diabetes, primary and secondary |
Pregnancy |
Age < 5 years |
Age > 65 years |
Other factors: |
Malnutrition , involving protein, calories, vitamins or trace metals |
Use of acid-suppressing medication, particularly proton pump inhibitors |
Condition | Relative Susceptibility |
---|---|
Transplant | 2584 |
Cancer—blood | 1364 |
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) | 865 |
Dialysis | 476 |
Cancer—pulmonary | 229 |
Cancer—gastrointestinal/liver | 211 |
Noncancer liver disease | 143 |
Cancer—bladder and prostate | 112 |
Cancer—gynaecological | 66 |
Diabetes—insulin-dependent | 30 |
Diabetes—noninsulin-dependent | 25 |
Alcoholism | 18 |
Perinatals * | 14 |
Aged > 65 years | 7.5 |
Less than 65 years, no other condition (reference population) | 1 |
4. Main Foods Associated with Hazards
Rank | Pathogen-Food Combination |
---|---|
1 | Campylobacter—poultry |
2 | T. gondii—pork |
3 | L.monocytogenes—deli meats |
4 | S. enterica—poultry |
5 | L. monocytogenes—dairy |
5 | Norovirus—complex foods |
7 | S. enterica—complex foods |
8 | S. enterica—produce |
8 | T. gondii—beef |
10 | S. enterica—eggs |
11 | L. monocytogenes—complex foods |
12 | S. enterica—beef |
13 | S. enterica—pork |
14 | Norovirus—produce |
Pathogen | Foods |
---|---|
Campylobacter | Poultry (40%–90%) dairy (10%–40%) red meat (up to 40%) |
Norovirus | Seafood up to 40%; produce 20%–40% |
Clostridium perfringens | Beef & lamb 40%–50%; poultry up to 20%; complex foods up to 20% |
Salmonella | Eggs 10%–80%; poultry up to 40%; produce up to 20%; poultry, pork, beef and lamb each up to 20% |
E. coli O157 | Beef and lamb 40%–70%; produce 10%–30% |
Listeria | Unspecified red meat up to 50%; dairy up to 40%; complex foods up to 40%; seafood up to 20%, other meats up to 20%; produce up to 10% |
5. Main Factors Leading to Foodborne Disease
6. Prevention of Foodborne Disease in Vulnerable People
6.1. Control of Food Provision
6.2. Avoid Food from Unsafe Sources
Place, Date | Pathogen | Setting | Cases {Hospitalized} (Deaths) | Food Implicated | Factors Leading to Outbreaks | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Austria, 2006 | C. jejuni, C. coli | Tertiary care hospital | 7 (0) patients, 14 staff (0) | Poultry dishes | Prepared in hospital kitchen with no HACCP system in place | [22] |
UK, 2011 | C. jejuni, C. coli | Wedding party | 49 {0} (0) | Chicken liver pâté | Undercooked (cooked to 60 °C) | [23] |
USA, 2012 | C. jejuni | Community | 148 {10} (0) | Unpasteurized milk | No inactivation | [24] |
USA, 2012 | C. jejuni | Community | 6 {2} (0) | Chicken liver | Undercooked | [25] |
USA 2001 | Clostridium perfringens | Residential care facility for mentally ill | 7 {2} (2) Deaths associated with constipation resulting from medication | Thanksgiving meal with turkey | Large amount of food prepared well in advance of serving | [26] |
UK, 2005 | Clostridium perfringens | Buffet lunch at event | 54 {nr} (nr) | Chicken curry | Prepared in a domestic kitchen, not registered with local authority, bulk of cooked curry left to cool at ambient temperature for ~10 h. | [27] |
USA, 2010 | Clostridium perfringens | Psychiatric hospital | 42 (3) patients, 12 (0) staff. Deaths associated with impaired intestinal motility | Cooked chicken | Cooked ~24 h before serving, not cooled adequately | [28] |
USA, 2012–2013 | E. coli O157 | Community | 17 {0} (0) | Raw ground beef | Traditional practice, previous outbreaks. | [29] |
Germany, 2011 | E. coli O104:H4 | Community | 3816 {~800} (54) | Raw, sprouted seeds (fenugreek) | Difficult to disinfect before sprouting. | [30,31] |
USA, 2012 | E. coli O157 | Schools, daycare, long-term care facilities | 17 {6} (2) | Packaged salad lettuce | Possible contamination during growth in field | [32] |
Denmark, 2009 | Listeria | Meals-on-wheels | 7 {7} (2) | Sliced beef with sauces and vegetables, intended for microwave cooking by consumer | Beef had been cooked by the supplier at a lower temperature than usual. Four patient had cancer, one had systemic lupus erythematosus, three were aged >80 | [33] |
Austria, Germany, Czech Republic 2009–2010 | Listeria | Community | 34 {nr} (8) | ‘Quargel’ cheese (Red smear cheese) | Cheese made with pasteurized milk, but contamination probably occurred when cheeses were coated with a culture of Brevibacterium linens: subsequent holding at 12 °C–16 °C probably allowed multiplication of listeria | [34,35] |
USA, 2010 | Listeria | Five hospitals | 10 {5} (5) | Diced celery, often in sandwiches. | Probably contaminated in the field | [36] |
USA 2010–2015 | Listeria | Hospital | 10 {10} (3) | Milkshakes made with ice-cream product | Unsatisfactory hygiene in factory producing ice-cream | [37] |
Denmark, 2005 | Norovirus | Hospital, nursing homes, meals-on-wheels service, restaurant, company canteen | >1000 {~400} (0) | Imported frozen raspberry pieces, | Contamination during growth/harvesting on small farms | [38] |
Germany, 2012 | Norovirus | Mainly schools and canteens | ~11,000 {38} (0) | Imported frozen strawberries | Possible contamination during growth/harvesting | [39] |
Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, 2013 | Hepatitis A virus | Community | >106 {nr} (nr) | Imported frozen strawberries | Possible contamination during growth/harvesting | [40,41] |
Austria, 2009 | Norovirus | Hospital, rehabilitation centre and convalescent home | 114 (0) Patients and staff affected | Sliced cold sausage; meat dish with salad; spinach pancake | Contamination by one of five asymptomatic excreters among kitchen staff who prepared food. No HACCP in place | [42] |
UK, Norway, France, Sweden, Denmark, 2010 | Norovirus | Mainly restaurants | 334 cases, 65 clusters {nr} (nr) | Oysters | Probably contaminated in oyster-growing areas and inadequately cooked | [43] |
Denmark, 2005 | S. Typhimurium DT104* | Restaurant | 40 {11} (0) | Carpaccio (thinly sliced, raw fillet of beef) | Imported, contaminated beef uncooked | [44] |
Netherlands, 2005 | S. Typhimurium DT104 | Community, food from mobile caterers a risk factor | 169 {0} (0) | Steak tartare (raw, minced beef) | Imported, contaminated beef uncooked | [45] |
Germany, The Netherlands 2011 | S. Newport | Rehabilitation clinic and Asian restaurants in Germany, hospital in the Netherlands | 126 {30} (0) | Mung bean sprouts | Sprouts served raw or undercooked | [46] |
Netherlands, 2012 | S. Thompson | Community | >1149 {>46} (>4) | Smoked salmon | Transport of salmon on reusable, porous dishes on processing lines. | [47] |
UK, 2014 (part of multinational outbreak) | S. Enteritidis | Hospital canteen, (patients, staff and visitors affected),three restaurants | 287 {78} (1) | Eggs from a German producer | Not reported, probably undercooked | [48] |
6.3. Ensure Adequate Cooking
Food | Temperature to be Reached in All Parts of the Food | Time at Specified Temperature | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
1. Meat, eggs, seafood, minced meats, rolled roasts, large joints of meat, whole poultry, soups, stews poultry | 70 °C | - | [49] |
2. Burgers(ground, minced meat) poultry livers, and other foods | 70 °C | At least 2 min | [50] |
or equivalent temperature/time combination | [51] [52] | ||
3. Raw eggs broken and prepared for immediate service, Fish, meat, except as specified in 4, 5, 6. | 63 °C (145 °F) or above | 15 s | [53] |
4. Mechanically tenderized meat, injected meats, ratites, comminuted fish, meat, game animals commercially raised for food, raw eggs not prepared for immediate service | 68 °C (155 °F) | 15 s | [53] |
or equivalent temperature/time combination | |||
70 °C (158 °F) | <1 s | ||
66 °C (150 °F) | 1 min | ||
63 °C (145 °F) | 3 min | ||
5. Whole meat roasts including beef, corned beef, pork, cured pork roasts such as ham | 70 °C (158 °F) | - | [53] |
Or equivalent temperature/time combination, e.g. | |||
65 °C (149 °F) | 85 s | ||
6. Poultry, baluts, wild game animals, stuffed fish, stuffed pasta, stuffed poultry stuffed ratites, stuffing containing fish, meat, poultry or ratites | 74 °C (165°F) or above | 15 s | [53] |
7. Raw animal food cooked in a microwave oven | >74 °C (165 °F) | Allow to stand for 2 min | [53] |
6.4. Ensure Control of Holding Temperature
6.5. Prevent Cross-Contamination of Foods
6.6. Maintain Good Personal Hygiene
6.7. Low—Microbial Diets
7. Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lund, B.M. Microbiological Food Safety for Vulnerable People. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 10117-10132. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120810117
Lund BM. Microbiological Food Safety for Vulnerable People. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2015; 12(8):10117-10132. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120810117
Chicago/Turabian StyleLund, Barbara M. 2015. "Microbiological Food Safety for Vulnerable People" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 12, no. 8: 10117-10132. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120810117
APA StyleLund, B. M. (2015). Microbiological Food Safety for Vulnerable People. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 12(8), 10117-10132. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph120810117