Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households

Introduction: Salmonella is an important foodborne bacterial pathogen that causes high risk to human health globally. Purpose: This study aimed to estimate the risk of Cambodian consumers of acquiring salmonellosis after consuming contaminated chicken and pork salad using a quantitative microbial r...

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Main Authors: Chea, Rortana, Sinh Dang-Xuan, Hung Nguyen-Viet, Lindahl, Johanna F., Grace, Delia, Unger, Fred, Tum, S., Ty, C., Boqvist, Sofia
Format: Ponencia
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121063
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author Chea, Rortana
Sinh Dang-Xuan
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Grace, Delia
Unger, Fred
Tum, S.
Ty, C.
Boqvist, Sofia
author_browse Boqvist, Sofia
Chea, Rortana
Grace, Delia
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Sinh Dang-Xuan
Tum, S.
Ty, C.
Unger, Fred
author_facet Chea, Rortana
Sinh Dang-Xuan
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Grace, Delia
Unger, Fred
Tum, S.
Ty, C.
Boqvist, Sofia
author_sort Chea, Rortana
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Introduction: Salmonella is an important foodborne bacterial pathogen that causes high risk to human health globally. Purpose: This study aimed to estimate the risk of Cambodian consumers of acquiring salmonellosis after consuming contaminated chicken and pork salad using a quantitative microbial risk assessment. Methods: Chicken meat and pork samples (n=204 each) were collected from traditional markets in 25 provinces for Salmonella analyses. Practices of cooking chicken and pork salad from 93 Cambodian households were surveyed and used to design an experiment to assess Salmonella cross-contamination from raw meat to ready-to-eat salad. Data on Salmonella contamination, salad consumption and dose response (alpha=0.00853 and beta=3.14) were modelled using Monte Carlo simulations with @Risk at 10,000 iterations. Results: The prevalence of Salmonella in chicken meat and pork were 42.6% (87/204) and 45.1% (92/204) respectively. The average concentration of Salmonella in chicken meat was 10.6 MPN/g, and in pork 11.1 MPN/g. Half of the interviewed households processed and cooked meat for salad directly after purchasing. The QMRA model showed that the annual risk of salmonellosis estimated from consuming chicken salad, pork salad and mixtures of chicken and pork salads were 11.2% (90%CI 0.0 – 35.1), 4.0% (90%CI 0.0 – 21.3), and 14.5% (90%CI 0.0 – 33.5), respectively. The factors with the highest influence on the estimate were cross-contamination while preparing salad, followed by the prevalence of Salmonella on chicken meat and pork at the market. A wide confidence interval in the estimated incidence was mainly due to the variability in the degree of reduction in bacteria concentration by cooking, and salad consumption pattern. Significance: The risk of salmonellosis due to chicken and pork salad consumption appears to be high. Control measures may include improving the safety of retailed chicken and pork at markets and improving hygiene practices and equipment during salad preparation at household.
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spelling CGSpace1210632025-12-08T09:54:28Z Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households Chea, Rortana Sinh Dang-Xuan Hung Nguyen-Viet Lindahl, Johanna F. Grace, Delia Unger, Fred Tum, S. Ty, C. Boqvist, Sofia food safety animal products Introduction: Salmonella is an important foodborne bacterial pathogen that causes high risk to human health globally. Purpose: This study aimed to estimate the risk of Cambodian consumers of acquiring salmonellosis after consuming contaminated chicken and pork salad using a quantitative microbial risk assessment. Methods: Chicken meat and pork samples (n=204 each) were collected from traditional markets in 25 provinces for Salmonella analyses. Practices of cooking chicken and pork salad from 93 Cambodian households were surveyed and used to design an experiment to assess Salmonella cross-contamination from raw meat to ready-to-eat salad. Data on Salmonella contamination, salad consumption and dose response (alpha=0.00853 and beta=3.14) were modelled using Monte Carlo simulations with @Risk at 10,000 iterations. Results: The prevalence of Salmonella in chicken meat and pork were 42.6% (87/204) and 45.1% (92/204) respectively. The average concentration of Salmonella in chicken meat was 10.6 MPN/g, and in pork 11.1 MPN/g. Half of the interviewed households processed and cooked meat for salad directly after purchasing. The QMRA model showed that the annual risk of salmonellosis estimated from consuming chicken salad, pork salad and mixtures of chicken and pork salads were 11.2% (90%CI 0.0 – 35.1), 4.0% (90%CI 0.0 – 21.3), and 14.5% (90%CI 0.0 – 33.5), respectively. The factors with the highest influence on the estimate were cross-contamination while preparing salad, followed by the prevalence of Salmonella on chicken meat and pork at the market. A wide confidence interval in the estimated incidence was mainly due to the variability in the degree of reduction in bacteria concentration by cooking, and salad consumption pattern. Significance: The risk of salmonellosis due to chicken and pork salad consumption appears to be high. Control measures may include improving the safety of retailed chicken and pork at markets and improving hygiene practices and equipment during salad preparation at household. 2022-07-31 2022-09-01T10:14:33Z 2022-09-01T10:14:33Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121063 en Open Access application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation International Livestock Research Institute Chea, R., Sinh Dang-Xuan, Hung Nguyen-Viet, Lindahl, J., Grace, D., Unger, F., Tum, S., Ty, C. and Boqvist, S. 2022. Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households. Presented at the 2022 annual meeting of the International Association for Food Protection, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 31 July–3 August 2022. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle food safety
animal products
Chea, Rortana
Sinh Dang-Xuan
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Grace, Delia
Unger, Fred
Tum, S.
Ty, C.
Boqvist, Sofia
Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households
title Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households
title_full Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households
title_fullStr Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households
title_short Quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in Cambodian households
title_sort quantitative microbial risk assessment of salmonellosis from chicken and pork salad consumption in cambodian households
topic food safety
animal products
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121063
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