Last data update: Mar 17, 2025. (Total: 48910 publications since 2009)
Records 1-2 (of 2 Records) |
Query Trace: Sheau Fong Low M[original query] |
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Demographic characteristics and county-level indicators of social vulnerability in salmonellosis outbreaks linked to ground beef- United States, 2012-2018
Waltenburg MA , Salah Z , Canning M , McCain K , Rickless D , Ablan M , Crawford TN , Sheau Fong Low M , Robyn M , Angelique MMolinari N , Marshall KE . J Food Prot 2024 100411 Ground beef is a common source of US Salmonella illnesses and outbreaks. However, the demographic and socioeconomic factors that are related to risk in ground beef-associated outbreaks of Salmonella infections are poorly understood. We describe the individual-level demographic characteristics and county-level indicators of social vulnerability for people infected with Salmonella linked to outbreaks associated with ground beef in the United States during 2012-2018. Non-Hispanic (NH) White and NH American Indian/Alaska Native persons, and people living in non-metropolitan areas, were overrepresented among people in salmonellosis outbreaks linked to ground beef. Case patients disproportionately resided in counties with high social vulnerability, suggesting that one or more community social risk factors may contribute to or be associated with some food safety risks. Collecting and analyzing socioeconomic and demographic characteristics of people in outbreaks can help identify disparities in foodborne disease, which can be further characterized and inform equity-focused interventions. |
Multinational outbreak of Listeria monocytogenes infections linked to enoki mushrooms imported from The Republic of Korea 2016-2020
Pereira E , Conrad A , Tesfai A , Palacios A , Kandar R , Kearney A , Locas A , Jamieson F , Elliot E , Otto M , Kurdilla K , Tijerina M , Son I , Pettengill JB , Chen Y , Fox T , Lane C , Aguillon R , Huffman J , Sheau Fong Low M , Wise M , Edwards L , Bidol S , Blankenship HM , Rosen HE , Leclercq A , Lecuit M , Tourdjman M , Herber H , Singleton LS , Viazis S , Bazaco MC . J Food Prot 2023 86 (7) 100101 ![]() ![]() Keeping the global food supply safe necessitates international collaborations between countries. Health and regulatory agencies routinely communicate during foodborne illness outbreaks, allowing partners to share investigational evidence. A 2016-2020 outbreak of Listeria monocytogenes infections linked to imported enoki mushrooms required a multinational collaborative investigation among the United States, Canada, Australia, and France. Ultimately, this outbreak included 48 ill people, 36 in the United States and 12 in Canada, and was linked to enoki mushrooms sourced from one manufacturer located in the Republic of Korea. Epidemiologic, laboratory, and traceback evidence led to multiple regulatory actions, including extensive voluntary recalls by three firms in the United States and one firm in Canada. In the United States and Canada, the Korean manufacturer was placed on import alert while other international partners provided information about their respective investigations and advised the public not to eat the recalled enoki mushrooms. The breadth of the geographic distribution of this outbreak emphasizes the global reach of the food industry. This investigation provides a powerful example of the impact of national and international coordination of efforts to respond to foodborne illness outbreaks and protect consumers. It also demonstrates the importance of fast international data sharing and collaboration in identifying and stopping foodborne outbreaks in the global community. Additionally, it is a meaningful example of the importance of food sampling, testing, and integration of sequencing results into surveillance databases. |
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