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Foodborne Disease Surveillance in the U.S.: FoodNet, PulseNet, and Outbreak Alert! Caroline Smith DeWaal Center for Science in the Public Interest (U.S.)

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Presentation on theme: "Foodborne Disease Surveillance in the U.S.: FoodNet, PulseNet, and Outbreak Alert! Caroline Smith DeWaal Center for Science in the Public Interest (U.S.)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Foodborne Disease Surveillance in the U.S.: FoodNet, PulseNet, and Outbreak Alert! Caroline Smith DeWaal Center for Science in the Public Interest (U.S.) Geneva, Switzerland June 8, 2005 June 8, 2005

2 The Burden of Illness According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there are an estimated:  76 million foodborne illnesses annually in the U.S.  325,000 hospitalizations due to foodborne illness annually in the U.S.  5,000 deaths due to foodborne illness annually in the U.S.

3 Foodborne Disease Surveillance & Investigation in the U.S.  FoodNet – active surveillance  PulseNet – laboratory network that performs microbial sub-typing  Outbreak Alert! – food attribution

4 Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet)  Active, laboratory-based surveillance within ten well-defined surveillance areas around the United States  Monitor trends in foodborne diseases  Conduct case-control studies

5 FoodNet (cont.) FoodNet Pathogens CampylobacterCyclosporaCryptosporidium Escherichia coli O157:H7 Listeria monocytogenes SalmonellaShigellaVibrio Yersinia enterocolitica  Approximately 15,000 laboratory- diagnosed cases, each year  Data collected includes patient demographics, co- morbidities, hospital stay details, and laboratory results

6 PulseNet USA  National database of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns  Enables outbreak cases and concurrent sporadic cases to be distinguished  Does not include routine PFGE patterns from food and animal sources

7 What is PFGE?  DNA “fingerprinting”  A method used to differentiate specific strains of bacteria using DNA migration by size in an agarose gel stimulated by an electrical current  More sensitive and discriminating than conventional gel electrophoresis because the electrical field used to stimulate DNA migration is pulsed (constantly changing) rather than uniform

8 PulseNet USA (cont.) PulseNet Pathogens Campylobacter jejuni CyclosporaCryptosporidium Escherichia coli O157:H7 Listeria monocytogenes SalmonellaShigellaVibrio Yersinia enterocolitica  The PulseNet database includes tens of thousands of PFGE patterns  Labs at the national, state, and local levels have access to the database

9 Outbreak Alert! Food Categories BeefBeverages Breads & Bakery Dairy Eggs & Egg Dishes Game Luncheon/Other Meats Multi-Ingredient Foods Multiple Foods PorkPoultryProduceSeafood  Outbreaks in the U.S. occurring between 1990-2003  Contains almost 4,500 outbreaks including over 138,000 individual cases of foodborne illness  A project managed and maintained by a private, non-profit, consumer advocacy group

10 Trends in Outbreak Reporting, 1990-2003 Source: Center for Science in the Public Interest, Outbreak Alert! database, 2005

11 Outbreak Alert! (cont.)  Useful for alerting consumers to food safety hazards, providing better information for food safety resource allocation, and identifying gaps in the U.S. outbreak reporting systems  Outbreak Alert! is scheduled to be updated and released in September 2005. Available at: http://www.cspinet.org/foodsafety/

12 Conclusions  Importance of consumer groups providing government oversight  U.S. surveillance programs need to be more integrated and coordinated  A single, unified food safety agency would strengthen the U.S. foodborne disease surveillance programs, and the food safety infrastructure overall


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