C. perfringens intoxications
E. coli O157:H7 disease
S. aureus intoxications
Notes: N/A = Not applicable.
Kidney failure.
Includes only hospitalized patients because of data limitations.
Includes only toxoplasmosis cases related to fetuses and newborn children who may become blind or mentally retarded. Some
toxoplasmosis. Another high-risk group for this parasite is the immunocompromised, such as patients with AIDS.
Totals are rounded down to reflect the uncertainty of the estimates.
4
Economic Research Service/USDA
An Economic Assessment of Food Safety Regulations
lobacter jejuni/coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia
coli (E. coli) O157:H7, Clostridium perfringens, Listeria
monocytogenes, and Toxoplasma gondii. The table also
presents the estimated percent attributable to foodborne
sources and the resulting cases of foodborne illness
cases and associated deaths.
Human illness caused by
Salmonella is frequently
associated with poultry, beef, and egg consumption (Lin,
Roberts, and Madison, 1993). Symptoms generally
occur 6-72 hours after eating contaminated food
(Benenson, 1990), and can last from days to weeks
(although most last only a day or two). Acute symptoms
include abdominal pain, nausea, stomachache, vomiting,
cold chills, fever, exhaustion, and, in rare cases, bloody
stools. Endocarditis (infection of the heart), meningitis
(infection of the brain), and pneumonia may follow the
acute stage. The pathogen can also cause chronic
complications such as rheumatoid syndromes, colitis,
and thyroiditis. Death may result from the illness. A new
strain,
Salmonella enteritidis, can be passed to eggs
before the shell forms if the hen is infected. Raw shell
eggs and their products can be contaminated with
Salmonella enteritidis. Home-made foods containing raw
eggs, such as ice cream, egg nog, mayonnaise, cake
frosting, lightly cooked egg dishes, and Caesar salad,
are potentially risky. A recent outbreak of
Salmonella
enteritidis-related illness in the Midwest was traced to ice
cream transported in containers that had previously
carried unpasteurized liquid eggs.
Human illness caused by
Campylobacter has been
linked to chicken or poultry consumption. Symptoms
usually begin 1-10 days after exposure to contaminated
food (Benenson, 1990) and can last for days. These
symptoms include malaise, diarrhea, vomiting, severe
abdominal pain, (occasionally) bloody diarrhea, and
fever. Other complications may follow, such as meningi-
tis, arthritis, cholecystitis, urinary tract infection, appendi-
citis, septicemia, Reiter syndrome, and Guillain-Barré
syndrome (GBS) -- a major cause of nontrauma-related
paralysis in the United States. A small proportion of
patients die.
Illness caused by
E. coli O157:H7 is less widespread, but
has received considerable publicity following a 1993
outbreak in California, Idaho, Nevada, and Washington
attributed to undercooked hamburgers in a fast-food
restaurant chain, a 1996 outbreak in Japan of unknown
origin, and a 1996 outbreak related to unpasteurized
apple juice in the Midwest. The pathogen has also been
found in raw milk, unpasteurized apple cider, processed
sausage, and home-prepared hamburgers. The latter
present a particular risk; the bacteria can live on the
surface of meat products and are normally destroyed by
cooking. However, when meat is ground to make
hamburger or sausage the organism can be distributed
throughout the product, and the raw meat ground into
hamburger can come from many different meat car-
casses. (This can increase the probability of contamina-
tion.) If the sausage or hamburger is undercooked or
eaten rare, the bacteria in the center of the meat might
not be killed. It generally takes 3-7 days before symp-
toms occur after eating contaminated food. Acute
symptoms, lasting 6-8 days, are diarrhea (often bloody),
abdominal pain, vomiting, and little or no fever. Chronic
consequences include hemolytic uremic syndrome
(HUS), which is characterized by kidney failure and
strikes mostly children under the age of 5. Some propor-
tion of patients will die.
Not all segments of the population are equally at risk
from microbial foodborne disease. Much of the in-
creased risk is from impaired immune systems; organ-
isms, which a healthy immune system can fight, may
pose a greater risk to some population subgroups than
others (table 2). Elderly individuals may undergo a
decrease in immune function as they age. The immune
system of neonates (newborn children) and young
children is not fully developed. Pregnancy puts the fetus
at special risk of foodborne illness caused by pathogens
such as
Listeria monocytogenes and Toxoplasma gondii;
miscarriage, stillbirth, or fetal abnormality may occur.
Since, by definition, the immune systems of people with
AIDS or infected by the HIV virus are damaged or
destroyed, these patients are also at greater risk of
foodborne disease.
Foodborne illness trends over time are not consistent
across pathogens. Some illnesses may be decreasing
over time, while others may be increasing. The U.S.
population is increasing at a little over 1 percent each
year, and part of this growth is attributed to a greater
number of children and elderly people, two categories
most affected by foodborne illnesses (although the
proportion of children as a share of the total population is
expected to decline). However, it seems clear that, as
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