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Food Safety Risk Assessment - PubH 7100-104. 1 of 40. Overview of 3 published ... Identification of food safety research on E. coli O157:H7 in ground beef. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1 of 40


1
Overview of 3 published risk assessments
  • Don Schaffner, Ph.D.
  • Rutgers, The State University of NJ

2
Three risk assessments
  • Salmonella Enteritidis Risk Assessment
  • Draft Risk Assessment of the Public Health Impact
    of Escherichia coli O156H7 in Ground Beef
  • Quantitative Assessment of Relative Risk to
    Public Health from Foodborne Listeria
    monocytogenes Among Selected Categories of
    Ready-to-Eat Foods

3
Se in eggs
  • Oldest full microbial risk assessment (started
    1996, completed in 1998)
  • Quite complex!
  • Uses _at_risk add-in to Microsoft Excel

4
Se in eggs objectives
  • Model from farm to table the unmitigated risk of
    foodborne illness due to SE from the consumption
    of eggs and egg products
  • Identify target areas along the farm-to-table
    continuum for potential risk reduction activities
  • Compare the public health benefits accruing from
    the mitigated risk of SE foodborne illness with
    the implementation of various intervention
    strategies
  • Provide information on risk-effectiveness of
    mitigation to be utilized by the agency for
    subsequent cost-effectiveness and cost-benefit
    analysis
  • Identify data gaps and guide future research and
    data collection efforts

5
Diagram of Se in eggs QRA
6
Diagrams from production module
7
Diagram (again)
8
Shell Eggs Processing and Distribution Module
9
Yolk membrane breakdown
  • SE are found in the white
  • The white contains growth inhibitors
  • The yolk membrane keeps SE out of the yolk
  • The yolk membrane degrades with time and
    temperature

10
Data used to create model
  • Unpublished data from Tom Humphreys, UK
  • Data points represent the time for more than 25
    of a group of 9-11 eggs to permit SE growth

11
Diagram of Se in eggs QRA
12
Example of LE processing complexity
13
Diagram of Se in eggs QRA
14
Preparation and consumption diagram
  • Pooling (the process of combining eggs together)
    influences risk

15
Diagram of Se in eggs QRA
16
Dose response
  • Salmonella species used in feeding trials appear
    to be less virulent than SE, based on the
    epidemiologic data. Morales et al. (1996)
    proposed Shigella dysenteriae as a surrogate for
    SE

17
E. coli O157H7
  • Initiated in 1998
  • http//www.fsis.usda.gov/OPHS/ecolrisk/home.htm
  • Draft released in 2001
  • http//www.fsis.usda.gov/OPPDE/rdad/FRPubs/00-023N
    Report.pdf
  • Reviewed by National Academy of Science 2002
  • http//books.nap.edu/books/0309086272/html

18
E. coli O157H7 in ground beef objectives
  • Goal is to produce a baseline risk assessment
    that
  • Reflects current practices along the
    farm-to-table continuum
  • Accurately assesses the likelihood of illness and
    death
  • The primary use is to assist FSIS in reviewing
    and refining its risk reduction strategy for E.
    coli O157H7 in ground beef
  • The risk assessment produces scientific support
    for
  • Development of regulatory impact assessments to
    support FSIS rulemaking
  • Identification of critical control points and
    critical control limits in HACCP systems for
    ground beef
  • Risk-based sampling plans for FSIS inspectors
  • Identification of food safety research on E. coli
    O157H7 in ground beef.

19
E. coli O157H7 in ground beef diagram
20
The problem of prevalence
  • How common is the problem in herds?
  • In a positive herd, how common is the problem?

21
Why is season important?
22
E. coli O157H7 in ground beef diagram
23
Slaughter module
  • Note that contamination may increase, decrease or
    stay the same

24
E. coli O157H7 in ground beef diagram
25
Preparation module
26
Change during storage
27
Change during cooking
28
E. coli O157H7 in ground beef diagram
29
Dealing with dose response
30
Risk characterization (picture)
31
Risk characterization (words)
  • Most contaminated cooked ground beef servings
    contain only 1 E. coli O157H7 organism and the
    risk of illness from one E. coli O157H7 is low.
  • Few contaminated cooked ground beef servings
    contain 100,000 E. coli O157H7 organisms per
    serving (1.8 10-7) but this dose results in the
    highest risk of illness (1.0 10-7) from E. coli
    O157H7 in a ground beef serving.
  • Reducing the number of E. coli O157H7-contaminate
    d ground beef servings may reduce risk of illness
    more than reducing the amount of E. coli O157H7
    in contaminated servings.

32
Listeria monocytogenes in RTE foods
  • The purpose of the assessment is
  • to examine systematically the available
    scientific data and information
  • to estimate the relative risks of serious illness
    and death associated with consumption of
    different types of ready-to-eat (RTE) foods
  • This examination of the current science and the
    models developed from it are among the tools that
    food safety regulatory agencies will consider
    when evaluating the effectiveness of current and
    future policies, programs, and regulatory
    practices.
  • A distinction is made between the mild
    non-invasive illness (referred to as listerial
    gastroenteritis) and the severe, sometimes
    life-threatening, disease (referred to as
    listeriosis). This risk assessment only considers
    listeriosis.

33
Listeria monocytogenes in RTE foods
  • Released plan in 1999
  • Released draft in 2001
  • Revised in 2003
  • Note different FAO/WHO risk assessment ongoing
    during the same time

34
What does it do?
  • Provides analyses and models that
  • Estimate the potential level of exposure
  • Three age-based population groups and the total
    United States population to
  • Listeria monocytogenes contaminated foods for 23
    food categories
  • Relates this exposure to public health
    consequences

35
Diagram of QRA
36
Interesting features
  • Assumed detected Lm is just the tip of the iceberg

37
Comparing relative ranks
38
Risk Characterization
  • High risk per serving
  • Deli Meats
  • Frankfurters, not reheated
  • Pâté and Meat Spreads
  • Unpasteurized Fluid Milk
  • Smoked Seafood
  • Cooked Ready-to-Eat Crustaceans
  • High risk per year (cases)
  • Deli Meats (1598.7)
  • Pasteurized Fluid Milk (90.8)
  • High Fat and Other Dairy Products (56.4)
  • Frankfurters, not reheated (30.5)

39
RC table
40
Three very different risk assessments
  • Salmonella Enteritidis in eggs
  • Farm-to-fork, many foods
  • Draft Risk Assessment of the Public Health Impact
    of Escherichia coli O156H7 in Ground Beef
  • Farm-to-fork, single food, still not done!
  • Quantitative Assessment of Relative Risk to
    Public Health from Foodborne Listeria
    monocytogenes Among Selected Categories of
    Ready-to-Eat Foods
  • Limited scope (i.e. not farm-to-fork), many
    (many!) foods
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