Developing a risk management framework to improve public health outcomes by enumerating Salmonella in ground Turkey

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Abstract

Salmonella spp. continue to be a leading cause of foodborne morbidity worldwide. To assess the risk of foodborne disease, current national regulatory schemes focus on prevalence estimates of Salmonella and other pathogens. The role of pathogen quantification as a risk management measure and its impact on public health is not well understood. To address this information gap, a quantitative risk assessment model was developed to evaluate the impact of pathogen enumeration strategies on public health after consumption of contaminated ground Turkey in the USA. Public health impact was evaluated by using several dose-response models for high-A nd low-virulent strains to account for potential under-or overestimation of human health impacts. The model predicted 2705-21 099 illnesses that would result in 93-727 reported cases of salmonellosis. Sensitivity analysis predicted cooking an unthawed product at home as the riskiest consumption scenario and microbial concentration the most influential input on the incidence of human illnesses. Model results indicated that removing ground Turkey lots exceeding contamination levels of 1 MPN/g and 1 MPN in 25 g would decrease the median number of illnesses by 86-94% and 99%, respectively. For a single production lot, contamination levels higher than 1 MPN/g would be needed to result in a reported case to public health officials. At contamination levels of 10 MPN/g, there would be a 13% chance of detecting an outbreak, and at 100 MPN/g, the likelihood of detecting an outbreak increases to 41%. Based on these model prediction results, risk management strategies should incorporate pathogen enumeration. This would have a direct impact on illness incidence linking public health outcomes with measurable food safety objectives.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere69
JournalEpidemiology and infection
Volume147
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This project was funded by the MnDRIVE Global Food Ventures grant 'Developing a Risk Management Framework to Improve Public Health Outcomes by Enumerating Salmonella in Ground Meat and Poultry Products' from the University of Minnesota. Dr Hedberg has received consulting income from Cargill (not related to this research), which provided in-kind support for this research. This relationship was reviewed and managed by the University of Minnesota in accordance with its conflict of interest polices.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Cambridge University Press.

Keywords

  • Ground Turkey
  • pathogen enumeration
  • risk assessment
  • salmonella

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