Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga

Contaminated milk is responsible for up to 90% of all dairy-related diseases of humans. A cross sectional study was carried out in Lushoto and Handeni districts of Tanga region to determine handling practices, bacterial contaminations and selected milk-borne zoonotic pathogens along the dairy valu...

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Autores principales: Shija, F., Nonga, H., Kurwijila, Lusato R., Roesel, Kristina, Grace, Delia, Misinzo, G.
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34880
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author Shija, F.
Nonga, H.
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Roesel, Kristina
Grace, Delia
Misinzo, G.
author_browse Grace, Delia
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Misinzo, G.
Nonga, H.
Roesel, Kristina
Shija, F.
author_facet Shija, F.
Nonga, H.
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Roesel, Kristina
Grace, Delia
Misinzo, G.
author_sort Shija, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Contaminated milk is responsible for up to 90% of all dairy-related diseases of humans. A cross sectional study was carried out in Lushoto and Handeni districts of Tanga region to determine handling practices, bacterial contaminations and selected milk-borne zoonotic pathogens along the dairy value chain. A total of 93 respondents were interviewed and subsequently 184 samples of milk and its product were collected for laboratory analysis of total plate count (TPC), coliform plate count (CPC), and detection of Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Brucella abortus using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Results showed 57% of famers milked their cows under unhygienic conditions and plastic containers were used for storage. Although the mean total plate count was exactly within the East African Standards (EAS, 5.3 log10 cfu/ml) the counts ranged between 3.3 log10 to,5.8 log10 where 87% and 93% of milk from farmers and vendors, respectively, were above the acceptable EAS standards. Meanwhile, 100 % of milk samples were above CPC EAS standards. PCR analyses did not detect E.coli O157:H7 in all the tested milk samples while B. abortus was detected in 37 out of 87 samples tested (42.5%). It was concluded that limited veterinary/extension services, unhygienic practices of milking and post-harvest handling along the dairy value chain possibly contributed to microbial contamination of milk. Detection of B. abortus in milk is of public health significancy due to its zoonotic potential. It is recommended that veterinary/extension services should be provided to livestock farmers on proper animal husbandry and control of diseases.
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spelling CGSpace348802025-11-04T20:00:06Z Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga Shija, F. Nonga, H. Kurwijila, Lusato R. Roesel, Kristina Grace, Delia Misinzo, G. health Contaminated milk is responsible for up to 90% of all dairy-related diseases of humans. A cross sectional study was carried out in Lushoto and Handeni districts of Tanga region to determine handling practices, bacterial contaminations and selected milk-borne zoonotic pathogens along the dairy value chain. A total of 93 respondents were interviewed and subsequently 184 samples of milk and its product were collected for laboratory analysis of total plate count (TPC), coliform plate count (CPC), and detection of Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Brucella abortus using polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Results showed 57% of famers milked their cows under unhygienic conditions and plastic containers were used for storage. Although the mean total plate count was exactly within the East African Standards (EAS, 5.3 log10 cfu/ml) the counts ranged between 3.3 log10 to,5.8 log10 where 87% and 93% of milk from farmers and vendors, respectively, were above the acceptable EAS standards. Meanwhile, 100 % of milk samples were above CPC EAS standards. PCR analyses did not detect E.coli O157:H7 in all the tested milk samples while B. abortus was detected in 37 out of 87 samples tested (42.5%). It was concluded that limited veterinary/extension services, unhygienic practices of milking and post-harvest handling along the dairy value chain possibly contributed to microbial contamination of milk. Detection of B. abortus in milk is of public health significancy due to its zoonotic potential. It is recommended that veterinary/extension services should be provided to livestock farmers on proper animal husbandry and control of diseases. 2013-12 2014-02-14T11:02:41Z 2014-02-14T11:02:41Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34880 en Open Access application/pdf Shija F, Nonga H, Kurwijila LR, Roesel K, Grace D and Misinzo G. 2013. Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga. Presentation at the 31st Tanzania Veterinary Association scientific conference, Arusha, Tanzania, 3-5 December 2013.
spellingShingle health
Shija, F.
Nonga, H.
Kurwijila, Lusato R.
Roesel, Kristina
Grace, Delia
Misinzo, G.
Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga
title Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga
title_full Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga
title_fullStr Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga
title_full_unstemmed Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga
title_short Determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in Tanga
title_sort determination of risk factors contributing to microbial contamination in milk and identification of presence of selected pathogenic bacteria along dairy value chain in tanga
topic health
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34880
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