Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jul 2005)

Attributing Illness to Food

  • Michael B. Batz,
  • Michael S. Doyle,
  • J. Glenn Morris,
  • John Painter,
  • Ruby Singh,
  • Robert V. Tauxe,
  • Michael R. Taylor,
  • Danilo M.A. Lo Fo Wong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1107.040634
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
pp. 993 – 999

Abstract

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Identification and prioritization of effective food safety interventions require an understanding of the relationship between food and pathogen from farm to consumption. Critical to this cause is food attribution, the capacity to attribute cases of foodborne disease to the food vehicle or other source responsible for illness. A wide variety of food attribution approaches and data are used around the world, including the analysis of outbreak data, case-control studies, microbial subtyping and source tracking methods, and expert judgment, among others. The Food Safety Research Consortium sponsored the Food Attribution Data Workshop in October 2003 to discuss the virtues and limitations of these approaches and to identify future options for collecting food attribution data in the United States. We summarize workshop discussions and identify challenges that affect progress in this critical component of a risk-based approach to improving food safety.

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