Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2008)

Integrated Food Chain Surveillance System for Salmonella spp. in Mexico

  • Mussaret B. Zaidi,
  • Juan Jose Calva,
  • Maria Teresa Estrada-Garcia,
  • Veronica Leon,
  • Gabriela Vazquez,
  • Gloria Figueroa,
  • Estela Lopez,
  • Jesus Contreras,
  • Jason Abbott,
  • Shaohua Zhao,
  • Patrick McDermott,
  • Linda Tollefson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1403.071057
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
pp. 429 – 435

Abstract

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Few developing countries have foodborne pathogen surveillance systems, and none of these integrates data from humans, food, and animals. We describe the implementation of a 4-state, integrated food chain surveillance system (IFCS) for Salmonella spp. in Mexico. Significant findings were 1) high rates of meat contamination (21.3%–36.4%), 2) high rates of ceftriaxone-resistant S. Typhimurium in chicken, ill humans, and swine (77.3%, 66.3%, and 40.4% of S. Typhimurium T isolates, respectively), and 3) the emergence of ciprofloxacin resistance in S. Heidelberg (10.4%) and S. Typhimurium (1.7%) from swine. A strong association between Salmonella spp. contamination in beef and asymptomatic Salmonella spp. infection was only observed in the state with the lowest poverty level (Pearson r = 0.91, p<0.001). Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis of 311 S. Typhimurium isolates showed 14 clusters with 102 human, retail meat, and food-animal isolates with indistinguishable patterns. An IFCS is technically and economically feasible in developing countries and can effectively identify major public health priorities.

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