Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania

In Tanzania, more than 80% of the milk consumed is marketed as loose, raw milk. On the other hand, the practice of boiling milk before consumption is very common. The study was carried out to establish food safety status of informally marketed milk including boiled milk. Milk samples were collected...

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Main Authors: Kilango, K., Makita, K., Kurwijila, Lusato R., Grace, Delia
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: 2012
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27763
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author Kilango, K.
Makita, K.
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Grace, Delia
author_browse Grace, Delia
Kilango, K.
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Makita, K.
author_facet Kilango, K.
Makita, K.
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Grace, Delia
author_sort Kilango, K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In Tanzania, more than 80% of the milk consumed is marketed as loose, raw milk. On the other hand, the practice of boiling milk before consumption is very common. The study was carried out to establish food safety status of informally marketed milk including boiled milk. Milk samples were collected in four wards of Temeke Municipality of Dar es salaam. A total of 69, 44 and 7 milk samples were collected from randomly selected farmers, milk kiosks and all milk vendors. The bacteriological quality of the milk with respect to Total Bacterial Counts (TBC) and Escherichia coli was lower at milk vendors level than farm and milk kiosk. The TBC of raw milk was found to be an average of 2.8 ± 0.98 x 106 cfu/ml at producer level, 3.4 ± 2.6 x 107 cfu/ml at vendor’s level and 4.8 ± 3.3 x 107 cfu/ml at kiosk level. TBC values for kiosk milk boiled and served hot was also determined and found to be an average of 3.7 ± 2.3 x 105 cfu/ml. The samples were analysed for presence of toxin producing Staphylococcus aureus. Exposure assessment showed that the probability of purchasing boiled milk contaminated with S. aureus, served hot at kiosks was 0.227 (90%CI: 0.062-0.436). It was estimated that every day, 953 (90%CI: 718-1,249) people purchase milk from kiosks in peri-urban Temeke, and among them, 217 (90%CI: 62-427) people were likely to purchase contaminated milk. The present study found that while boiling made milk generally safer by killing most pathogens, it still carries the risk of consumer exposure to pathogenic bacteria due to possible recontamination.
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spelling CGSpace277632025-11-04T16:28:16Z Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania Kilango, K. Makita, K. Kurwijila, Lusato R. Grace, Delia In Tanzania, more than 80% of the milk consumed is marketed as loose, raw milk. On the other hand, the practice of boiling milk before consumption is very common. The study was carried out to establish food safety status of informally marketed milk including boiled milk. Milk samples were collected in four wards of Temeke Municipality of Dar es salaam. A total of 69, 44 and 7 milk samples were collected from randomly selected farmers, milk kiosks and all milk vendors. The bacteriological quality of the milk with respect to Total Bacterial Counts (TBC) and Escherichia coli was lower at milk vendors level than farm and milk kiosk. The TBC of raw milk was found to be an average of 2.8 ± 0.98 x 106 cfu/ml at producer level, 3.4 ± 2.6 x 107 cfu/ml at vendor’s level and 4.8 ± 3.3 x 107 cfu/ml at kiosk level. TBC values for kiosk milk boiled and served hot was also determined and found to be an average of 3.7 ± 2.3 x 105 cfu/ml. The samples were analysed for presence of toxin producing Staphylococcus aureus. Exposure assessment showed that the probability of purchasing boiled milk contaminated with S. aureus, served hot at kiosks was 0.227 (90%CI: 0.062-0.436). It was estimated that every day, 953 (90%CI: 718-1,249) people purchase milk from kiosks in peri-urban Temeke, and among them, 217 (90%CI: 62-427) people were likely to purchase contaminated milk. The present study found that while boiling made milk generally safer by killing most pathogens, it still carries the risk of consumer exposure to pathogenic bacteria due to possible recontamination. 2012-11-08 2013-03-16T17:07:06Z 2013-03-16T17:07:06Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27763 en Open Access application/pdf Kilango, K., Makita, K., Kurwijila, L. and Grace, D. 2012. Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania. Paper presented at the 2012 IDF World Dairy Summit, Cape Town, South Africa, 4-8 November 2012. Nairobi: ILRI
spellingShingle Kilango, K.
Makita, K.
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Grace, Delia
Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania
title Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania
title_full Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania
title_fullStr Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania
title_short Boiled milk, food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in Tanzania
title_sort boiled milk food safety and the risk of exposure to milk borne pathogens in informal dairy markets in tanzania
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27763
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