1 / 59

Foodbrone Illnesses

Foodbrone Illnesses. Viruses. Viruses. Temperature : Can survive cooler and freezer temperatures Growth : Cannot grow in food, but once eaten, they grow inside a person’s intestines Contamination : Can contaminate both food and water

turner
Download Presentation

Foodbrone Illnesses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Foodbrone Illnesses

  2. Viruses

  3. Viruses • Temperature: Can survive cooler and freezer temperatures • Growth: Cannot grow in food, but once eaten, they grow inside a person’s intestines • Contamination: Can contaminate both food and water • Transfer: person to person; people to food; people to food-contact sufraces

  4. Foodborne Illnesses Caused by Viruses • Hepatitis A • Norovirus

  5. Hepatitis A • Illness: Hepatitis A (HEP-a-TI-tiss) • Pathogen: Hepatitis A • Transfer Methods: Foodhandlers touch food or equipment with fingers that have feces on them • Most Important Prevention: Practicing personal hygiene

  6. Hepatitis A • Common foods: Ready-to-eat food; shellfish from contaminated water • Symptoms: fever; general weakness; nausea; abdominal pain; jaundice

  7. Norovirus • Illness: Norovirus gastroenteritis (NOR-o-VI-rus GAS-tro-EN-ter-l-tiss) • Pathogen:Norovirus • Transfer Methods: Foodhandlers touch food or equipment with fingers that have feces on them; contaminated water • Most Important Prevention: Practicing personal hygiene

  8. Norovirus • Common foods: Ready-to-eat food; shellfish from contaminated water • Symptoms: vomiting; diarrhea; nausea; abdominal cramps

  9. Bacteria

  10. Bacteria • Temperature: bacteria can be controlled by keeping food out of the danger zone • Growth: if FAT TOM conditions are right, bacteria will grow quickly • Form: some bacteria can change into the form of spores when food is not available • Toxin producing: some bacteria produce toxins and then die; the toxins make you sick

  11. Foodborne Illnesses Caused by Bacteria • Bacillus cereus gastroenteritis • Listeriosis • Hemorrhagic colitis • Clostridium perfringens gastroenteritis • Botulism • Salmonellosis • Shigellosis • Staphylococcal gastroenteritis • Vibrio vulnificus primary septicemia/gastroenteritis

  12. Bacillus cereus gastroenteritis • Illness: Bacillus cereus gastroenteritis (ba-SIL-us SEER-ee-us GAS-tro-EN-ter-l-tiss) • Pathogen: Bacillus cereus • Transfer Methods: spore forming bacteria found in the ground, produces toxins when allowed to grow • Most Important Prevention: Controlling time and temperature

  13. Bacillus cereus gastroenteritis • Common foods: • Diarrhea illness: cooked veggie, meat products, milk • Vomiting illness: cooked rice dishes • Symptoms: • Diarrhea illness: watery diarrhea, no vomiting • Vomiting illness: Nausea, vomiting

  14. Listeriosis • Illness: Listeriosis (liss-TEER-ee-O-sis) • Pathogen: Listeria monocytogenes • Transfer Methods: found in soil, water and plants; grows in cool, moist environments • Most Important Prevention: Controlling time and temperature

  15. Listeriosis • Common foods: raw meat, unpaturized dairy products, ready-to-eat food (deli meat, hot dogs, soft cheeses) • Symptoms: • Pregnant women: miscarriage • Newborns: sepsis, pneumonia, meningitis

  16. Hemorrhagic colitis • Illness: Hemorrhagic colitis (hem-or-RA-jik ko-LI-tiss) • Pathogen: Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli • Transfer Methods: found in the intestines of cattle; meat can become contaminated during the slaughter process • Most Important Prevention: Controlling time and temperature

  17. Hemorrhagic colitis • Common foods: ground beef; contaminated produce • Symptoms: • Diarrhea (eventually becomes bloody) • Abdominal cramps • Kidney failure (in severe cases)

  18. Clostridium perfringens gastroenteritis • Illness: Clostridium perfringens gastroenteritis • Pathogen: Clostridium perfringens • Transfer Methods: found in soil where it forms spores; also found in intestines of animals and humans • Most Important Prevention: Controlling time and temperature

  19. Clostridium perfringens gastroenteritis • Common foods: meat, poultry, stews and gravies • Symptoms: • Diarrhea • Severe abdominal pain

  20. Botulism • Illness: Botulism • Pathogen: Clostridium botulinum • Transfer Methods: found in soil and water; grows without oxygen; produces a deadly toxin when time-temperature is abused • Most Important Prevention: Controlling time and temperature

  21. Botulism • Common foods: incorrectly canned foods, reduced oxygen packaged food, temperature abused vegetables (baked potatoes), untreated garlic-oil mixtures • Symptoms: • Initial: nausea and vomiting • Later: weakness, double vision, difficulty in speaking and swallowing

  22. Salmonellosis • Illness: Salmonellosis • Pathogen: Salmonellosis spp. • Transfer Methods: naturally carried in farms animals • Most Important Prevention: Preventing cross-contamination

  23. Salmonellosis • Common foods: Poultry and eggs, dairy products, produce • Symptoms: • Diarrhea • Abdominal cramps • Vomiting • Fever

  24. Shigellosis • Illness: Shigellosis • Pathogen: Shigellaspp. • Transfer Methods: found in human feces; contaminated food and water; files • Most Important Prevention: Practicing personal hygiene

  25. Shigellosis • Common foods: Food easily contaminated by hands (ex: potato salad); food that comes in contact with contaminated water (ex: produce) • Symptoms: • Bloody diarrhea • Abdominal pain and cramps • Fever (occasionally)

  26. Staphylococcal gastroenteritis • Illness: Staphylococcal gastroenteritis • Pathogen: Staphylococcus aureus • Transfer Methods: carried in human hair, nose, throat, and infected cuts; produces toxins • Most Important Prevention: Practicing personal hygiene

  27. Staphylococcal gastroenteritis • Common foods: salads containing TCS foods (egg, tuna, chicken), deli meat • Symptoms: • Nausea • Vomiting and retching • Abdominal cramps

  28. Vibrio gastroenteritis • Illness: Vibrio gastroenteritis ; Vibrio vulnificus primary septicemia • Pathogen: Vibrio vulnificus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus • Transfer Methods: found in waters where shell fish are harvested • Most Important Prevention: Purchasing from approved, reputable suppliers

  29. Vibrio gastroenteritis • Common foods: oysters from contaminated water • Symptoms: • Diarrhea • Vomiting • Abdominal cramps and Nausea • Low grade fever and chills

  30. 1. Who am I? • Many farm animals carry me naturally • I have been found in eggs, produce, and poultry • I can produce vomiting and diarrhea • Preventing cross-contamination is one way to prevent me.

  31. 2. Who am I? • I can produce toxins if I grow in large numbers • I have been linked with salads containing TCS foods • I can produce retching and abdominal cramps • Washing hands can prevent me

  32. 3. Who am I? • I am found in soil • I have been linked with cooked rice dishes • I can produce watery diarrhea • Cooking, holding and cooling food correctly can prevent me

  33. 4. Who am I? • I form spores • I have been linked with meat and poultry • I do not typically produce fever or vomiting • Holding, cooling and reheating food correctly can prevent me

  34. 5. Who am I?

  35. Parasites

  36. Characteristics of Parasites • Growth: cannot grow in food, must be in the meat of an animal to survive • Transfer: eating food contaminated; also found in feces • Contamination: contaminate both food and water

  37. Anisakiasis • Illness: Anisakiasis • Pathogen: Anisakis simplex • Transfer Methods: raw or undercooked fish containing the parasite • Most Important Prevention: Purchasing from approved, reputable suppliers

  38. Anisakiasis • Common foods: Raw or undercooked fish including: herring, cod, halibut, mackerel, pacific salmon • Symptoms: • Tingling in the throat • Coughing up worms

  39. Cryptosporidiosis • Illness: Cryptosporidiosis • Pathogen: Cryptosporidium parvum • Transfer Methods: touching food with fingers that have feces on them • Most Important Prevention: Purchasing from approved, reputable suppliers

  40. Cryptosporidiosis • Common foods: contaminated water, produce • Symptoms: • Watery diarrhea • Abdominal cramps • Nausea • Weight loss

  41. Giardiasis • Illness: Giardiasis • Pathogen: Giardia duodenalis • Transfer Methods: touching food with fingers that have feces on them • Most Important Prevention: Purchasing from approved, reputable suppliers

  42. Giardiasis • Common foods: improperly treated water, produce • Symptoms: • Initially • Fever • Later • Diarrhea • Abdominal cramps • Nausea

  43. Fungi

  44. Molds • Effects: spoil foods and sometimes cause illness • Toxins: some molds produce toxins • Growth: grow well in acidic food with little moisture • Temperature: cooler or freezer temperatures will slow growth, but not kill it • Prevention: throw out moldy food; FDA recommends cutting away moldy areas of hard cheese – at least 1 inch around

  45. Yeasts • Signs of spoilage: smell or taste of alcohol; pink or white discoloration or slime • Growth: grow well in acidic food with little moisture • Prevention: throw out spoiled food

  46. Biological Toxins

  47. Seafood toxins: cannot be smelled or tasted; cannot be destroyed by freezing or cooking • Mushroom toxins: toxic mushrooms mistaken for edible • Plant toxins: most caused by purchasing from unapproved suppliers, but some caused by the plant not being cooked properly

  48. Seafood Toxins

  49. Scombroid poisoning • Illness: Scombroid poisoning • Toxin: Histamine • Transfer Methods: when time-temperature is abused, bacteria on the fish make the toxin • Most Important Prevention: Purchasing from approved, reputable suppliers

More Related