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Salmonella spp. in low water activity food: Occurrence, survival mechanisms, and thermoresistance Texto completo
2022
Morasi, Rafaela Martins | Rall, Vera Lúcia Mores | Dantas, Stéfani Thais Alves | Alonso, Vanessa Pereira Perez | Silva, Nathália Cristina Cirone
The occurrence of disease outbreaks involving low‐water‐activity (aw) foods has gained increased prominence due in part to the fact that reducing free water in these foods is normally a measure that controls the growth and multiplication of pathogenic microorganisms. Salmonella, one of the main bacteria involved in these outbreaks, represents a major public health problem worldwide and in Brazil, which highlights the importance of good manufacturing and handling practices for food quality. The virulence of this pathogen, associated with its high ability to persist in the environment, makes Salmonella one of the main challenges for the food industry. The objectives of this article are to present the general characteristics, virulence, thermoresistance, control, and relevance of Salmonella in foodborne diseases, and describe the so‐called low‐water‐activity foods and the salmonellosis outbreaks involving them.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Food- and water-borne disease: Using case control studies to estimate the force of infection that accounts for primary, sporadic cases Texto completo
2013
Smith, G.
Disease models which take explicit account of heterogeneities in the risk of infection offer significant advantages over models in which the risk of infection is assumed to be uniform across all hosts. However, estimating the incidence rate (force of infection) in the different at-risk (exposure) groups is no easy matter. Classically, epidemiologists differentiate groups of hosts with different infection-risks according to their exposure to putative explanatory risk factors. The importance of these risk factors is assessed by case-control studies, in which the measure of effect (the difference in disease occurrence between one population and another) is the odds ratio. This paper describes for the first time how – and under what circumstances – the incidence in these different exposure groups can be estimated from odds ratios derived from case control studies in which controls have been selected by density sampling. This new estimation technique can be applied to any transmission modality but is especially useful in the case of models of food- and water-borne disease for which the case control literature represents a vast and, as yet, untapped resource. The paper finishes with a worked example using one of the most common of all food- and water-borne pathogens, Toxoplasma gondii.
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