Attribution of Foodborne Illnesses, Hospitalizations, and Deaths to Food Commodities by using Outbreak Data, United States, 1998–2008
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention · Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Abstract
Each year, >9 million foodborne illnesses are estimated to be caused by major pathogens acquired in the United States. Preventing these illnesses is challenging because resources are limited and linking individual illnesses to a particular food is rarely possible except during an outbreak. We developed a method of attributing illnesses to food commodities that uses data from outbreaks associated with both simple and complex foods. Using data from outbreak-associated illnesses for 1998-2008, we estimated annual US foodborne illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths attributable to each of 17 food commodities. We attributed 46% of illnesses to produce and found that more deaths were attributed to poultry than to…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 170.85
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
7- JAJohn A. PainterCorresponding
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- RMRobert M. Hoekstra
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- TATracy Ayers
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- RVRobert V. Tauxe
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- CRChristopher R. Braden
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Topics & keywords
- Outbreak
- Environmental health
- Medicine
- Commodity
- Contaminated food
- Attribution
- Geography
- Business
- Zero hunger