Abstract


Posted in Aflatoxin, Aflatoxin B1, Animal Feed Mould Toxin, Aspergillus Toxin, Decontamination Microbial, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Toxin, Fusarium Toxin, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, Mold Toxin, Mould Toxin, Mycotoxin, Ochratoxin, Ochratoxin A, Pet Food Aflatoxin, Research, Toxin
Between 18 August and 13 October 2022, five cases of Listeria monocytogenes have been registered at the Statens Serum Institut . The Statens Serum Institut, the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration and the Norwegian Food Institute DTU are investigating the disease outbreak.
Between 18 August and 13 October 2022, the Statens Serum Institut registered five people who are infected with the same type of Listeria monocytogenes (figure 1). Among the sick are 2 men and 3 women. The patients are between 6-83 years old (median age is 75 years). The patients are infected throughout the country (table 1).

Table 1. Patients with the same type of Listeria monocytogenes in Denmark, August to October 2022, per region (n=5)
Region |
Number of patients |
| The capital | 1 |
| Central Jutland | 1 |
| Northern Jutland | 0 |
| Zealand | 1 |
| Southern Denmark | 2 |
| Total | 5 |
The outbreak is handled by the Central Outbreak Group, which consists of SSI, the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration and the DTU Food Institute. SSI stands for whole-genome sequencing of listeria isolates from the patients and interviews with patients or relatives with a view to identifying a possible source of infection.
The bacteria is of the type Listeria monocytogenes . By whole-genome sequencing of the Listeria monocytogenes bacteria isolated from the patients, it can be seen that they are very closely related and belong to sequence type 7.
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, food bourne outbreak, Food Illness, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, Foodborne Illness, foodborne outbreak, foodbourne outbreak, Illness, Listeria, Listeria monocytogenes, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, outbreak
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, Raw Milk, raw milk cheese, STEC, STEC E.coli
The role of vegetables usually consumed without prior culinary treatment is known to contribute to the prevalence of foodborne diseases. Cysts and oocysts can contaminate food, which can then be the source of infection in humans. The aim of the study was to assess the occurrence of Giardia duodenalis and Cryptosporidium spp. (oo)cysts in green leafy vegetables marketed in the city of Valencia (Spain) combining parasitological methods, two real-time qPCRs and light microscopy. An experimental field study was conducted on 129 vegetable samples, 64 from conventional farms and 65 from ecological (organic) farms. The samples were washed with water, and the resulting solution after removing the vegetables, was subjected to 24-hour sedimentation. The concentrated sediment was used for the search for protozoa. A positive result by both real-time PCRs, or a positive result by one qPCR and confirmation by microscopy was established as a positivity criterion. Giardia duodenalis was detected in 23.0 % of the samples, and Cryptosporidium spp. in 7.8 %. G. duodenalis (41.5 %) and Cryptosporidium spp. (20.0 %) were more frequent in ecological crops. The high level of contamination detected in organic vegetables may be due to the type of fertilizers and the quality of the water used for their irrigation and reinforces the need to take extreme hygiene measures in vegetables that are consumed raw.
Posted in Contaminated water, Cryptosporidiosis, Cryptosporidium, Decontamination Microbial, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, Giardia, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, Water, water microbiology, Water Safety
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, Research, Salmonella, Salmonella in Chicken
On 5 August 2019, local primary care epidemiologists at the Aljarafe Health District in the province of Seville, Andalusia, notified to the SVEA three cases of food poisoning that had occurred in the previous week. One case was hospitalised; this patient’s blood culture later revealed L. monocytogenes growth. In the following days, five additional clusters comprising a total of 32 cases were notified in Seville and one adjacent Andalusian province, and the same pathogen was identified in two of those clusters. These events prompted the local health authorities’ response on 7 August, with instructions to intensify the epidemiological surveillance and environmental sampling in certain food establishments.
By 9 August, the aggregate patient count had reached 22, which included four other cases requiring hospitalisation. In the following days, given the information from epidemiological interviews, in conjunction with microbiological results from non-human samples, the regional government constituted a multidisciplinary committee to investigate the outbreak, comprised of professionals from epidemiological surveillance, healthcare (including urgent care and infectious diseases), microbiology, food safety, and health authorities.
The aim of the outbreak investigation was twofold: (i) to identify the causative agent and the source of infection in order to prevent any further cases and (ii) to discover the reasons behind such a rapid progression of the outbreak. Here, we describe the outbreak and the epidemiological, microbiological and environmental investigations that were carried out to answer these questions.
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, food bourne outbreak, Food Illness, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, Foodborne Illness, foodborne outbreak, foodbourne outbreak, Illness, Listeria, Listeria monocytogenes, listeriosis, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, outbreak
Executive summary
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are estimated to cause more than 1.2 million illnesses and 128 deaths globally each year. The previous work of FAO and WHO identified beef and other types of meats, dairy products and produce as significant risk factors for STEC infection. As such, at its 42nd Session, the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC) endorsed the Codex Committee on Food Hygiene’s (CCFH) recommendation for the development of guidelines for the control of STEC in beef, raw milk and cheese produced from raw milk, leafy greens and sprouts.
To facilitate this work, the CCFH requested that FAO and WHO Joint Expert Meeting on Microbiological Risk Assessment (JEMRA) provide scientific advice on the effectiveness and utility of control measures against STEC during primary production, processing and post-processing of raw meat, raw milk and raw milk cheeses.
During the meeting, the expert committee reviewed interventions for the control of STEC in cattle, raw beef and raw milk and raw milk cheese manufactured from cows’ milk, and also evaluated available evidence for other small ruminants (goat, sheep), swine and other animals (reindeer, yak, camelids, bison, buffalo and swine). The expert committee was tasked with scoring the degree of support for the effectiveness of interventions for the specific control of STEC as high, medium or low based on the evidence available within the scientific literature.
In meat production and processing systems, many approaches to support control of STEC are based on good agricultural practices (GAP) and/or good hygiene practice (GHP) that aim to generally reduce the spread of pathogens and are not specifically focused on STEC. On-farm, these include managing the hygienic conditions of housing, bedding and drinking water hygiene, appropriate animal density and biosecurity measures, effective sanitation of facilities and proper disposal of manure.
On-farm, several dietary and herd management strategies with varying levels of impact on STEC populations in beef and dairy animals have been explored. Evidence to support cattle demography
(Section 2.1.3), animal density
(Section 2.2.2), biosecurity
(Section 2.2.1), and environmental hygiene
(Section 2.2.3) were rated as having a medium or medium to high degree of support with regards to their ability to impact STEC. Interventions including feeding of forage versus concentrate rations, specific grain types
(Section 2.3.3), and the inclusion of citrus products and essential oils in feed
(Section 4.2.5) were supported at low to medium or medium degree of support, yet probiotics may be useful with administered to cattle, goats and sheep through feed
(Sections 2.3.4.1 and 6.1.1). Some vaccines have been shown to reduce faecal excretion of STEC O157:H7
(Section 2.4.1), but their efficacy is variable depending on the vaccine and the number of doses administered.
Long distance transport and the stress of interim unloading/loading have been shown to increase faecal excretion of STEC that can lead to cross-contamination between animals
(Section 2.6). Transport distances should be minimized in accordance with best practices for animal welfare, and the evidence related specifically to the control of STEC was supported at a low degree. A summary of primary production control
measures for STEC in cattle and their degree of support rating (high, medium, low), based on scientific evidence, is available in Annex 1.
Avoiding contamination of the carcass through contact with hides, gut contents or faeces during slaughter is an accepted management practice during meat processing, but evidence supporting the effectiveness and reliability of these
measures for the control of STEC was limited. Processing measures where evidence supported a high or medium to high rating for efficacy in STEC reduction included steam vacuuming of visible faecal contamination on carcasses (Section 3.3.4.3),
and the use of a hot potable water carcass wash, steam pasteurization followed by 24 h air chilling and combinations of these
(Section 3.4). The use of knife trimming to remove carcass tissue contaminated with faecal material is common and is supported by a medium confidence level in the evidence
(Section 3.3.4.2). Despite the commercial use of pre-chill carcass decontamination treatments using organic acids and other chemical agents, the confidence in the evidence was low in cattle and other small ruminants due to high variability in results
(Section 3.4.3). A summary of processing control measures for STEC in beef and their degree of support (high, medium, low), based on scientific evidence, is available in Annex 2.
The efficacy of available control measures for reducing or eliminating STEC on primal cuts, trim, cheek meats, and ground beef was widely varied. Yet, the use chemical antimicrobial dips
(Section 4.2) for primals and trims were supported at a low to medium level of confidence, and high-pressure processing (HPP)
(Section 4.1.6), gamma irradiation and electron beam sterilization (eBeam)
(Section 4.1.7) produced significant reductions of STEC in ground beef and in retail packs. A summary of post-processing control measures, and combinations of these, for STEC in beef and their degree of support (high, medium, low), based on scientific
evidence, is available in Annex 3.
Pork products and meat from wild game have occasionally been confirmed as vehicles of STEC transmission, but there are no interventions or practices during the processing of these animals that are specific for STEC. Meat from these species could be treated post-harvest in a similar fashion as beef to reduce STEC, but reports of the efficacy of these interventions are not available.
Contamination of milk with pathogens, including STEC, mainly occurs during milking or via milking equipment, milking personnel, and from the farm environment. Thus, factors affecting the carriage of STEC in live animals and those practices surrounding milking hygiene can reduce, but not assure the absence of contamination of raw milk.
The efficacy of the interventions against STEC during the production of raw milk and raw milk cheeses varied greatly depending on the animal origin of the raw milk, manufacturing practices, the scale of production, and the microbial load. Temperature control and hygiene during milking, storage and transportation can significantly affect the microbiological safety of raw milk prior to processing, packaging and sale of milk intended for drinking or for manufacturing of raw milk cheeses. Although these interventions can mitigate the growth of E. coli and other indicator organisms, the degree of support in the evidence for these interventions and the control of STEC ranged from low to medium
(Section 2.5). Apart from pasteurization, which is very effective, several technologies have been evaluated to mitigate the presence of STEC in raw milk. Bacteriophages specific to E. coli and STEC have shown some reductions in STEC during refrigeration storage of raw milk
(Section 5.1.5). The effect of adding bacteriophage to control E. coli during milk fermentation in the making of cheeses has also been examined with varying results depending on the STEC serovar. The degree of support in the evidence of bacteriophage to specifically control for STEC was evaluated as low
(Section 5.2.3). Gamma or eBeam irradiation are very effective at reducing bacterial levels in milk and on cheese surfaces, yet off-flavors are often reported. The degree of support for the evidence was rated as medium
(Section 5.3.2). A summary of processing and post-processing control measures for STEC in raw milk and raw milk cheese and their degree of support rating (high, medium, low), based on scientific evidence, is available in Annex 4.
The implementation of monitoring plans at the farm level to measure the impact of STEC prevalence is considered impractical, although sampling and testing of beef and raw milk products are a means to verify that food safety program are successful. Because STEC are often present only at low levels in foods, culture enrichment of food samples is a critical step in detecting STEC in meat, dairy and other foods. Since STEC testing is complex, the quantitative detection of non-type specific (NTS) E. coli has been proposed as an alternative hygienic indicator during processing and post-processing stages, although it is not an absolute estimate of STEC levels.
The use of molecular techniques, such as PCR, that target STEC virulence genes are highly sensitive and specific for STEC detection but presumptive results must be confirmed by traditional culture-based methods or by immunomagnetic
separation (IMS). Methods are needed that enable the efficient and specific isolation of STEC O157:H7 and non-O157 STEC.
The expert committee also discussed some of the limitations and gaps regarding the available data. In-plant scientific evaluations of interventions and treatments to control STEC throughout raw beef, raw milk and raw milk cheese production are
frequently prohibited due to health risks associated with the potential introduction of pathogens into the food supply and the cost associated with testing large number of samples required for detecting STEC in food matrices. Consequently, surrogate
bacteria, such as NTS E. coli, are used as substitutes and the results extrapolated, meaning that evidence of intervention effects specifically for STEC may not be available currently or in the future. Therefore, there is doubt and uncertainty as to
whether the detection and reduction levels observed in surrogate studies are truly representative of STEC or of commercial production and processing.
Many studies focused on the impact of an individual control measure at a specific stage in the food chain, rather than in the context a total food chain or of the safety of the food available to the consumer. Many food businesses have implemented
multiple control measures concurrently or sequentially on farms and in processing facilities, but the overall efficacy of multiple “hurdles” in the total chain remains difficult to quantify
It was recognized that with advances in analytical methods, including increasing use of molecular tools, the evaluation of evidence concerning some STEC control measures and interventions may need to be revised in the future.
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, Research, STEC, STEC E.coli
Spending time with family while baking is a great way to celebrate special occasions. When making cookies, brownies, cakes, or bread, you might be tempted to taste a bite before it’s fully baked.
But you can get sick after eating or tasting raw (unbaked) dough or batter. Children can get sick from handling or eating raw dough used for crafts or play clay, too. Follow these safety tips to help you and your loved ones stay healthy when preparing and handling raw dough.
Flour doesn’t look like a raw food, but most flour is raw. That means it hasn’t been treated to kill germs that cause food poisoning, such as Escherichia coli (E. coli). These harmful germs can contaminate grain while it’s still in the field or flour while it’s being made. Steps like grinding grain and bleaching flour don’t kill harmful germs—and these germs can end up in flour or baking mixes you buy at the store. You can get sick if you eat unbaked dough or batter made with flour containing germs. Germs are killed only when food made with flour is baked or cooked.
CDC investigated outbreaks of E. coli infections linked to raw flour or cake mix in 2016, 2019, and 2021. Some of these investigations led to recalls. Flour and baking mixes containing flour have long shelf lives, meaning they do not go bad quickly. It’s a good idea to check your pantry to see if you have any flour or baking mixes that have been recalled in recent years (search FDA’s recall listexternal icon). If you have any recalled flour or baking mixes, throw them away.
Raw eggs are another ingredient in dough and batter that can make you or your loved ones sick. Raw or lightly cooked eggs can contain Salmonella, a germ that causes food poisoning. Find out how to handle and cook eggs properly.
Some companies make edible cookie dough and brownie batter that you can find in stores. These products are made with heat-treated flour and pasteurized eggs or no eggs. Read the label carefully to make sure the dough is meant to be eaten without baking or cooking.
Follow these practices to prevent food poisoning when you are baking and cooking with flour and other raw ingredients.
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, E.coli, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, Food Safety, Food Safety Alert, Food Safety Management, food safety training, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, Salmonella
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Research, Food Microbiology Testing, Listeria, Listeria monocytogenes, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk, Research
The number of Listeria infections fell in 2020 in England and Wales, according to recently released data.
In total, 124 cases of listeriosis were reported in England and Wales in 2020, which is the lowest amount in several years. In 2019, 144 cases were recorded.
There were two outbreaks in England. One was a national epidemic with four cases associated with smoked salmon. Two people died. The other caused two illnesses from 2018 to 2020 and was linked to prepacked sandwiches served in hospitals.
Surveillance of listeriosis in England and Wales is coordinated by the Gastrointestinal Infections and Food Safety (One Health) Division at the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA). New cases are reported by local clinical laboratories, and health protection teams and by the referral of Listeria monocytogenes isolates to the Gastrointestinal Bacteria Reference Unit (GBRU) for whole genome sequencing (WGS).
Incidence rates were highest in people aged 80 years and older.
Posted in Decontamination Microbial, Food Illness, Food Micro Blog, Food Microbiology, Food Microbiology Blog, Food Microbiology Testing, Foodborne Illness, Foodborne Illness Death, Illness, Listeria, Listeria monocytogenes, microbial contamination, Microbial growth, Microbiological Risk Assessment, Microbiology, Microbiology Investigations, Microbiology Risk