An Approach to Describe Salmonella Serotypes of Concern for Outbreaks: Using Burden and Trajectory of Outbreak-related Illnesses Associated with Meat and Poultry
Foodborne disease prevention
Salmonella
Nutrition. Foods and food supply
0402 animal and dairy science
TX341-641
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
TP368-456
Food processing and manufacture
Article
Foodborne disease outbreaks
DOI:
10.1016/j.jfp.2024.100331
Publication Date:
2024-07-18T19:18:43Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Over 40% of all U.S. Salmonella illnesses are attributed to consumption of contaminated meat and poultry products each year. Determining which serotypes cause the most outbreak illnesses associated with specific meat and poultry types can inform prevention measures. We developed an approach to categorize serotypes using outbreak illness burden (high, moderate, low) and trajectory (increased, stable, decreased). We used data from 192 foodborne Salmonella outbreaks resulting in 7,077 illnesses, 1,330 hospitalizations, and 9 deaths associated with chicken, turkey, beef, or pork during 2012-2021. We linked each meat and poultry type to 1-3 serotypes that we categorized high outbreak illness burden and increased trajectory during 2021. Calculation and public display of outbreak illness burden and trajectory annually could facilitate prioritization of serotypes for prevention by federal and state health and regulatory agencies and by the meat and poultry industry.
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