Food-borne
illness risks cross borders, production types
Dr. Lonnie J. King sees a "perfect
microbial storm" in the increasingly global interactions of people,
animals, and environments.
Speaking late last year at a meeting convened
by the Institute of Medicine's Forum on Microbial Threats, Dr. King, dean of
The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine, said adaptation among
pathogens, increased human susceptibility to disease, changing environments,
intensification of the human-animal interface, human and animal movement across
international borders, and antimicrobial resistance have increased the risk of
food-borne diseases.
Foods ranging from peanut butter to melons
have been connected with recent outbreaks in the United States, Dr. King said.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome, which originated in bats in Southeast Asia
and spread through civet cats, infected people through food obtained at markets
containing live and slaughtered animals. Nipah virus transferred from bats to
pigs in Malaysia and then to people, and infection with the virus was recently
connected with consumption of raw date palm sap.
David W.K. Acheson, MD, managing director of
food and import safety for the consulting organization Leavitt Partners, also
spoke at the meeting. He said that although the frequency of food recalls in
the U.S. is increasing, the prevalence of illnesses connected with most of the
food-borne pathogens tracked by public health agencies is decreasing,
indicating that the nation's food safety system is working. Improved abilities
to detect pathogens and the sources of contaminated foods, along with increased
consumer awareness, have helped reduce harm.
Drs. King and Acheson were among about 20
presenters at the Dec. 13-14 meeting the IOM hosted in Washington, D.C., on the
topic of one-health approaches for improving food safety.
Dr. King noted that the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention estimates about 48 million food-borne illnesses occur in
the U.S. annually, and a similar rate worldwide would affect more than 1
billion people yearly.
"I have no idea how many global cases
there are of food-borne illnesses, but there may be more than we think,"
Dr. King said. He attributed the information gap to poor diagnostics and poor
methods of finding and reporting illnesses, and said innovations, new
techniques, and a one-health strategy will be critical for improvement.
Finding
potential outbreaks
Peter Daszak, PhD, president of the EcoHealth
Alliance, said slowly evolving retroviruses have infected people in Africa
through meat from wild primates. Although the viruses found in one study were
latent in humans, it is possible one could trigger a pandemic and become the
next HIV.
"As we look to the developing world and
we try to help people change behavior from hunting endangered species, what do
we do?" Dr. Daszak asked.
Wildlife trade is booming in Chinese markets
where SARS first emerged, he said, showing a photo of two men butchering a cat
on a tile floor near chicken remains. Unhygienic facilities mix animal species
near dense human populations, creating "perfect conditions for a new
pathogen to emerge," he said.
Dr. William B. Karesh, executive vice
president of health and policy at the EcoHealth Alliance, said conversion of
wilderness for human uses such as crops, pasture, and logging camps is the
biggest driver of wildlife-source zoonotic diseases. Food industry changes are
the second most important.
EcoHealth Alliance is working with the CDC and
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to test for pathogens in illegally imported wild
animals and wildlife products found in packages at U.S. ports of entry. It is
also working with the U.S. Agency for International Development in emerging
disease hot spots as well as cataloging potentially zoonotic viruses present in
rainforest primates, rodents, and bats, according to Drs. Daszak and Karesh.
Nathan Wolfe, DSc, an epidemiologist and CEO
of the Global Viral Forecasting Initiative, said unprecedented global
connections among world populations have led to the spread of microorganisms,
from the SARS virus to fungi carried on feet. His organization is monitoring
risks to those occupationally exposed to wild and domestic animals in Southeast
Asia and Central Africa, where people are voluntarily collecting blood samples
from butchered animals.
By finding disease emergence patterns, health
authorities could detect early movements of microorganisms from animals to
humans, he said.
Interaction
increasing risks
Dr. Will Hueston, executive director of the
Global Initiative for Food Systems Leadership and a professor at the University
of Minnesota, said feeding the world involves interdependent systems that
change daily as a result of a variety of factors including consumption
preferences, politics, exchange rates, and resource availability. U.S.
residents seem to be increasingly selective, for example, about which parts of
animals they will eat, preferring chicken breast meat and exporting dark meat
and chicken feet while importing shrimp from more than 50 countries. He added
that a chicken Kiev product can contain ingredients from more than 10 countries.
An exponential rise in global food system
connections and pushes for efficiency and affordability have increased the food
trade system's vulnerability to collapse, Dr. Hueston said. The concentration
of ingredient production in one region or country and just-in-time supply
chains are among such efficiency measures, he said.
Cultural clashes also can emerge from varied
perceptions of risk, particularly when an exporting country's citizens cook a
product and the importing country's citizens eat the food raw, Dr. Hueston
said.
Dr. Hueston thinks food producers and
processors can improve safety if they are given incentives and flexible
regulations and if the public and regulators don't seek someone to blame after
illnesses. He noted that risk cannot be eliminated.
Dr. King indicated that developed and
developing nations alike have growing populations at increased risk of illness.
As the U.S. population ages, a growing portion of that population could be
immunocompromised, he said. About 90 percent of the world's growth is occurring
in developing countries, and the world population living in slums is expected
to double in the next 25 years. These areas are likely to be the next areas of
emerging disease, he said.
Human and wildlife displacement and moving
populations may introduce new diseases, and much of the food bought worldwide
has some global component, he said.
"I think there's a real concern about the
vulnerability of these remarkable food systems to unintentional, natural, or
even intentional introduction of pathogens and contaminants," Dr. King
said. "It's just too easy to do."
Understanding
pathogen behavior
Better understanding the rules governing
food-borne pathogen transmission can help predict those pathogens' behavior and
anticipate disease outbreaks, Dr. Daszak said. Whether a person is eating
spinach produced in the U.S. or meat from wild primates, each activity has
pathogen risks that need to be predicted and minimized, he said.
Ecologists have examined complex wildlife
systems and developed computer simulations of population changes connected with
climate change and deforestation. Such science can be adapted to disease
systems, Dr. Daszak said.
Dr. Karesh said countries without developed
diagnostic capabilities may benefit more immediately from increased disease
prevention methods. Educating hunters and bush meat handlers about the risks
from contaminated animals and the need to wash their hands, for example, has
likely helped people in the Republic of Congo avoid contracting any known
infections with Ebola since 2005.
Dr. Karesh noted that deaths of bats from
white-nose syndrome in North America have let larger populations of
agricultural pests survive, and declines in U.S. bat populations could cause
losses estimated at billions of dollars. He said the issue presents a
convincing argument for collaboration among health professions.
The 2006 U.S. outbreak involving Escherichia
coli O157:H7 in spinach also demonstrates the value of considering
animal-related and environmental effects on human disease, Dr. King said. The
outbreak, which caused about 200 illnesses and three deaths, is believed to
have connections with wild pigs, surface water, soil on the spinach farm, and
nearby cattle. Surveillance of food-borne pathogens cannot be limited to monitoring
of human health, he said.
Surveillance has to produce data as part of
the food system and part of an integrated, holistic strategy, Dr. King said.
"That data needs to be shared as we move
from being reactive and disease-focused to being proactive, preventive, and
anticipatory," he said.
Preventive
measures in U.S. slaughterhouses, fields
Robert V. Tauxe, MD, deputy director of the
CDC Division of Foodborne, Waterborne and Environmental Diseases, expects most
future food safety improvements in the U.S. will occur prior to slaughter or
harvest. For example, E coli's impact on humans could be reduced by treating
cattle with vaccines, probiotics, bacteriophages, or feed additives, he said.
Michael R. Taylor, deputy commissioner for
foods for the Food and Drug Administration, noted that rules passed in 2009 to
reduce the burden of Salmonella enteritidis connected with eggs included
provisions for wildlife and pest control. The FDA announced in July 2009 the
regulations were expected to prevent 79,000 illnesses and 30 deaths yearly.
Dr. Tauxe noted that Salmonella organisms have
been found to cluster near stoma on fresh lettuce, and secretions from E coli
O157:H7 have been shown to hold open stoma that usually close in response to
bacterial flagellae. People or animals that eat the plant can become colonized.
Taylor said his agency is developing produce
production standards and scrutinizing drug use in Chinese aquaculture in
response to the Food Safety Modernization Act, which was signed into law in
January 2011. The agency is considering standards for water contamination and
animal intrusion as well as regulations on application of livestock manure on
crops to ensure pathogens die before harvest.
Taylor also noted that rules for pet food
production can prevent animal deaths from contaminants such as melamine and
owner infection with salmonellae. Good livestock health is also needed to
provide healthy food.
"The one-health perspective is just essential
to preventing food-borne illness," he said.
Greg Cima
JAVMA News
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