A group of food safety experts were
identified from Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden and asked about their
perceptions for foodborne outbreaks over the next decade. The likely cause of a
foodborne outbreak was vegetables and vegetable products, followed by herbs,
spices and condiments, fish and other seafood, meat and meat products and fruit
and fruit products.
Alcoholic beverages and sugar and
confectionery were voted as unlikely sources for foodborne outbreaks. Swedish
respondents more often selected herbs and spices as likely vehicles of
foodborne transmission, perhaps due to recent experience of the severe EHEC
outbreak in Germany and France, said the study.
Finnish respondents selected fish as a
likely vehicle, perhaps due a larger share of imported fish products, added the
authors.
Critical
point in the chain. Imports were identified as the
most likely critical points of agent proliferation generating an increase in outbreaks,
closely followed by food service with food transport the most unlikely point. Increased
import of foreign food and consumption of raw food scored highly as the likely
drivers of foodborne outbreaks.
The survey looked at addressing the issue
of potential changes in future outbreaks of human foodborne and waterborne
diseases relating to 2011-2020, compared with the previous decade. 61
respondents voted that it was unlikely that the number of outbreaks will
decrease by at least 10%. Almost 50% thought that it was likely that there
would be increasing exposure to known foodborne disease agents, while the
emergence of new foodborne disease agents or new variants of known agents was
cited as a concern.
Survey
participation. The survey involved Livsmedelsverket
(National Food Agency), Sweden, Mattilsynet (Norwegian Food Safety Authority),
Evira (Finnish Food Safety Authority) and DTU Fødevareinstituttet (National
Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark. It was conducted online from
December 2011 to May 2012 with 110 respondents.
The 19 questions covered beliefs about
outbreak trends, characteristics of a potential positive trend, the drivers of
such a potentially increasing number of outbreaks, and background questions on
nationality, education and professional experience of risk management,
assessment and communication.
Source: Food Quality News
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