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Trends in Burdens of Disease by Transmission Source (USA, 2005–2020) and Hazard Identification for Foods: Focus on Milkborne Disease
by
Stephenson, Michele M
, Azzolina, Nicholas A
, Coleman, Margaret E
in
Bacterial diseases
/ Collaboration
/ Datasets
/ Decision making
/ Disease control
/ Disease transmission
/ Environmental economics
/ Epidemics
/ Epidemiology
/ Food safety
/ Food security
/ Food waste
/ Foodborne diseases
/ Health hazards
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Illnesses
/ Infectious diseases
/ Milk
/ Morbidity
/ Outbreaks
/ Pasteurization
/ Pasteurized milk
/ Pathogens
/ Peanut butter
/ Public health
/ Risk analysis
/ Risk assessment
/ Risk management
/ Systematic review
/ Trends
/ Zero tolerance
2024
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Trends in Burdens of Disease by Transmission Source (USA, 2005–2020) and Hazard Identification for Foods: Focus on Milkborne Disease
by
Stephenson, Michele M
, Azzolina, Nicholas A
, Coleman, Margaret E
in
Bacterial diseases
/ Collaboration
/ Datasets
/ Decision making
/ Disease control
/ Disease transmission
/ Environmental economics
/ Epidemics
/ Epidemiology
/ Food safety
/ Food security
/ Food waste
/ Foodborne diseases
/ Health hazards
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Illnesses
/ Infectious diseases
/ Milk
/ Morbidity
/ Outbreaks
/ Pasteurization
/ Pasteurized milk
/ Pathogens
/ Peanut butter
/ Public health
/ Risk analysis
/ Risk assessment
/ Risk management
/ Systematic review
/ Trends
/ Zero tolerance
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Trends in Burdens of Disease by Transmission Source (USA, 2005–2020) and Hazard Identification for Foods: Focus on Milkborne Disease
by
Stephenson, Michele M
, Azzolina, Nicholas A
, Coleman, Margaret E
in
Bacterial diseases
/ Collaboration
/ Datasets
/ Decision making
/ Disease control
/ Disease transmission
/ Environmental economics
/ Epidemics
/ Epidemiology
/ Food safety
/ Food security
/ Food waste
/ Foodborne diseases
/ Health hazards
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Illnesses
/ Infectious diseases
/ Milk
/ Morbidity
/ Outbreaks
/ Pasteurization
/ Pasteurized milk
/ Pathogens
/ Peanut butter
/ Public health
/ Risk analysis
/ Risk assessment
/ Risk management
/ Systematic review
/ Trends
/ Zero tolerance
2024
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Trends in Burdens of Disease by Transmission Source (USA, 2005–2020) and Hazard Identification for Foods: Focus on Milkborne Disease
Journal Article
Trends in Burdens of Disease by Transmission Source (USA, 2005–2020) and Hazard Identification for Foods: Focus on Milkborne Disease
2024
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Overview
BackgroundRobust solutions to global, national, and regional burdens of communicable and non-communicable diseases, particularly related to diet, demand interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary collaborations to effectively inform risk analysis and policy decisions.ObjectiveU.S. outbreak data for 2005–2020 from all transmission sources were analyzed for trends in the burden of infectious disease and foodborne outbreaks.MethodsOutbreak data from 58 Microsoft Access® data tables were structured using systematic queries and pivot tables for analysis by transmission source, pathogen, and date. Trends were examined using graphical representations, smoothing splines, Spearman’s rho rank correlations, and non-parametric testing for trend. Hazard Identification was conducted based on the number and severity of illnesses.ResultsThe evidence does not support increasing trends in the burden of infectious foodborne disease, though strongly increasing trends were observed for other transmission sources. Morbidity and mortality were dominated by person-to-person transmission; foodborne and other transmission sources accounted for small portions of the disease burden. Foods representing the greatest hazards associated with the four major foodborne bacterial diseases were identified. Fatal foodborne disease was dominated by fruits, vegetables, peanut butter, and pasteurized dairy.ConclusionThe available evidence conflicts with assumptions of zero risk for pasteurized milk and increasing trends in the burden of illness for raw milk. For future evidence-based risk management, transdisciplinary risk analysis methodologies are essential to balance both communicable and non-communicable diseases and both food safety and food security, considering scientific, sustainable, economic, cultural, social, and political factors to support health and wellness for humans and ecosystems.
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