Category Archives: Campylobacter

RASFF Alert- Campylobacter – Besos Fuet

RASFF

Campylobacter in Besos Fuet from Spain in the Netherlands

Research – German testing finds Listeria and E. coli in raw milk

Food Safety News

Listeria and E. coli have been found during testing of unpasteurized, raw milk from farms in Germany.

From 2020 to 2022, the Chemical and Veterinary Investigation Office (CVUA) in Stuttgart tested 54 raw milk samples from vending machines for a range of agents.

Parameters examined included somatic cell count, total germ count, spoilage organisms, hygiene indicator germs such as Enterobacteriaceae and E. coli, and pathogens like Salmonella, Listeria, Campylobacter, and Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC).

The sale of raw milk is mostly prohibited but it can be sold directly on the farm via self-service vending machines. The producers should put up notices telling the consumers to boil raw milk before consumption.

Some findings were positive as 30 samples were compliant but 24 had issues. Results highlight the importance of regular cleaning of milking machines, pipes, and tanks at dairy farms, said scientists. Insufficient cooling can also lead to contamination of raw milk.

USA – Raw Farm Raw Milk Recalled in California For Campylobacter

Food Poisoning Bulletin

Raw Farm raw milk is being recalled in California for possible Campylobacter contamination. The milk is produced and packaged by Raw Farm, LLC of Fresno County, California. No illnesses have been reported to date in connection with the consumption of this unpasteurized milk. The farm is located at 7221 South Jameson Avenue in Fresno.

The recall and quarantine order was announced by California State Veterinarian Dr. Annette Jones after Campylobacter was found in the farm’s packaged whole raw milk. The milk was sampled and tested by the California Department of Food and Agriculture. Routine sampling conducted at the farm found the pathogen.

The recalled product is Raw Farm Whole Raw Milk that is packaged in half gallon (64 ounce) and gallon (128 ounce) plastic jugs. The code date that is marked on the container is BEST BY 05/05/2023.

USA- CDC – BEAM Dashboard – (Bacteria, Enterics, Amoeba, and Mycotics)

CDC

The BEAM (Bacteria, Enterics, Amoeba, and Mycotics) Dashboard is an interactive tool to access and visualize data from the System for Enteric Disease Response, Investigation, and Coordination (SEDRIC). The BEAM Dashboard provides timely data on pathogen trends and serotype details to inform work to prevent illnesses from food and animal contact. Currently, the dashboard focuses on data for Salmonella, Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC), Shigella and Campylobacter bacteria and multistate outbreaks, but it will eventually include additional pathogens, antimicrobial resistance data, and epidemiologic data from outbreak investigations.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

For additional questions, please contact simso@cdc.gov. Please take BEAM Dashboard Evaluation Survey if you would like to provide any feedback or have any comments.

Research – Researchers explore probiotics to control Campylobacter

Feedstuffs

On-farm control measures are required to mitigate the risk of the bacteria being transmitted to humans working with poultry and people who visit poultry farms. Abdelaziz’s lab is studying the impact of inoculating eggs (in-ovo) with probiotics on gut health and immune system development of broilers before they hatch.

Probiotics are live bacteria, fungi, or yeasts that help poultry maintain healthy digestive systems. They are increasingly being included in poultry diets as alternatives to antibiotics. Abdelaziz and his team believe in-ovo technology can be used to deliver probiotics to chicken embryos and help boost chicks’ immune systems before they hatch.

During their investigation, Abdelaziz and his team have found certain probiotics (lactobacilli) applied in-ovo to chick embryos increased immune-related genes in the chicks’ guts which could promote healthy immune systems of chick embryos. Future studies will investigate whether Lactobacillus-induced immune responses protect against harmful microorganisms after chicks hatch.

Researchers urge Campylobacter focus in the Czech Republic

Food Safety News

Scientists in the Czech Republic have called for a national reference laboratory for human Campylobacter infections to be created in the country.

From 2018 to 2021, 81,115 cases were reported in the electronic Infectious Disease Information System (ISIN). Slightly more men than women were sick. Campylobacter jejuni makes up the majority of cases followed by Campylobacter coli. The highest incidence was in people aged 1 to 4 years old.

Almost 10,000 people were hospitalized and 34 deaths were reported including five children younger than 5, three teenagers, seven people aged 21 to 35, and 19 people older than 57.

Preventative measures should be aimed at children younger than 5 because of the high incidence and people older than 80 who are at higher risk of severe illness and hospitalization, said scientists.

Research – Montana Raw Water Campylobacter Outbreak Linked to Bird’s Nest

Food Poisoning Bulletin

A Montana raw water Campylobacter outbreak in 2022 has been linked to a bird’s nest in a concrete cache from Kennedy Creek, according to ARS Technica. Nineteen people were sickened in that outbreak, and one person was hospitalized.

Research – Raw food: health risks are often underestimated

BFR

A glass of raw milk for breakfast, a roll with raw ham in the lunch break and a homemade smoothie with frozen berries in the afternoon – raw or unheated food is a regular part of the population’s menu. This is shown by a current, representative survey by the Federal Institute for Risk Assessment ( BfR ). Raw animal and vegetable products should be consumed with caution. They can contain pathogenic germs such as salmonella, listeria and campylobacter and lead to foodborne infections. Small children, people with previous illnesses, the elderly and pregnant women are particularly at risk. “The health risks of raw foods are often underestimated,” says BfR-President Professor Dr. dr Andrew Hensel. “Heating protects. Diseases can be avoided with simple kitchen hygiene rules. Sensitive groups of people in particular should only eat raw animal food that has been sufficiently heated.”

To the BfR Consumer Monitor Special information brochure, raw foods:

The particularly popular raw foods include raw sausage and raw ham, which are eaten several times a week by more than a third of those surveyed. At least one to three times a month, 73 percent of those surveyed eat raw meat and sausage products, followed by soft cheese made from raw milk (57 percent). Other foods eaten with the same frequency by around a third of those surveyed are raw meat (38 percent), cold-smoked fish (33 percent) and frozen berries (33 percent). While about one in five (21 percent) eats raw sweet dough with eggs at least once or three times a month, it is still one in eight (12 percent) when it comes to raw dough without eggs. 19 percent of respondents drink raw milk at least one to three times a month.

Every year around 100,000 diseases are reported in Germany that may have been caused by bacteria, viruses or parasites in food. The number of unreported cases is likely to be much higher. While salmonella, listeria and norovirus are known to the majority of the population, the knowledge about other food-related pathogens is less good. Particularly surprising: Although campylobacteriosis has been the most frequently reported bacterial food-borne illness in Germany and Europe for years, only just under a quarter (23 percent) of people know the causative pathogen Campylobacter . The same applies to the abbreviations STEC, EHEC and VTEC for particularly dangerous Escherichia coli-Bacteria (27 percent). The pathogens mentioned can lurk in a large number of raw foods: salmonella and campylobacter in poultry, chicken eggs and raw meat and sausage products, listeria in cold-smoked fish products and raw milk cheese or noroviruses in raw oysters and frozen berries as well as STEC in flour.

The perception of the health risk sometimes differs greatly between different raw or unheated foods. The majority of respondents see a medium to (very) high health risk in particular with raw fish and raw seafood, raw meat, raw eggs and raw sweet dough with eggs. Frozen berries, on the other hand, are perceived as the least risky. Other foods that the majority of those surveyed also associate with a (very) low health risk are soft cheese made from raw milk, cold-smoked fish, raw sausage and raw ham, as well as raw dough without eggs.

In order to protect yourself from foodborne infections, it is important to observe the rules of kitchen hygiene so that pathogens do not spread from raw foods to others. Small children, pregnant women and people with a weakened immune system should only eat raw food from animals if they have been sufficiently heated beforehand.

Via the BfR consumer monitor

Whether antibiotic resistance, microplastics, salmonella or aluminum in food – which health risks are known to the population and what worries them? The BfR Consumer Monitor, a representative population survey that has been carried out regularly since 2014, provides answers to these and other questions . To this end, around 1,000 people living in private households in Germany are being interviewed by telephone on behalf of the BfR . In addition, the BfR conducts representative surveys on individual topics that are of particular current interest, such as tattoos, e-cigarettes, superfoods or additives in food.

Research – Major pathogens rise in Ireland in 2022

Food Safety News

Campylobacter, Salmonella, E. coli, and Listeria infections all increased in Ireland in 2022, according to the latest figures.

Data from the Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC), which is part of the Health Service Executive (HSE), shows the number of reports for the four pathogens rose compared to 2021.

Notifications of Salmonellosis doubled and the number of E. coli infections passed 1,000.

Full reports on these four pathogens and for outbreaks have not been published since 2018 because of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic response and limited capacity at HPSC.

Campylobacter infections went up from 3,147 in 2021 to 3,619 in 2022.

Salmonella cases doubled from 173 in 2021 to 342 in 2022 but this is similar to 2018 and 2019 levels.

More than 1,000 Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) notifications were noted. Up from 962 in 2021.

A total of 18 listeriosis cases were recorded, up from 15 in 2021. Fourteen were men and four were women. Fifteen cases were in the over-65 age group while two were less than 1 to 4 years old.

Figures also show three cases of Bacillus cereus foodborne infection or intoxication compared to none in 2021.

The published data, which covers 2018 to 2022, reveals two cases of botulism, although it is unclear if food was the cause. There was also one report of brucellosis in 2022. All other years reported no notifications of these diseases.

There were 17 yersiniosis cases in 2022 compared to 18 in 2021. Cryptosporidiosis declined from 845 in 2021 to 566 in 2022.

Shigellosis went up from 70 in 2021 to 157 in 2022. Norovirus also increased from 439 in 2021 to 990 in 2022.

RASFF Alert – Campylobacter – Polish Chicken

RASFF

Salmonella spp. and Campylobacter spp. in chicken elements from Poland in France