Foods Implicated in U.S. Outbreaks Differ from the Types Most Commonly Consumed
Author(s) -
LaTonia C. Richardson,
Donald C. Cole,
Robert M. Hoekstra,
Anu Rajasingham,
Steven D. Johnson,
Bonnie Bruce
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of food protection
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.613
H-Index - 137
eISSN - 1944-9097
pISSN - 0362-028X
DOI - 10.4315/jfp-20-293
Subject(s) - outbreak , pasteurization , population , food contaminant , consumption (sociology) , biology , distribution (mathematics) , environmental health , food science , medicine , virology , mathematical analysis , social science , mathematics , sociology
Foodborne disease outbreak investigations identify foods responsible for illnesses. However, it is not known the degree to which foods implicated in outbreaks reflect the distribution of food consumption in the U.S. population or the risk associated with their consumption. We compared the distribution of 24 categories of foods implicated in outbreaks with the distribution of foods consumed by the U.S. population. Beef, chicken, eggs, fish, herbs, mollusks, pork, sprouts, seeded vegetables, and turkey were implicated in outbreaks significantly more often than expected based on the frequency of their consumption by the general population, suggesting a higher risk of contamination or mishandling from foods in these categories than from foods in other categories. In contrast, pasteurized dairy, fruits, grains and beans, oils and sugars, and root and underground vegetables were less frequently implicated in outbreaks than their frequency of consumption by the general population, suggesting a lower health risk associated with these food categories.
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