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Measuring foodborne illness levels

Thursday 18 April 2002

How the Food Standards Agency measures trends in foodborne illness.

What is foodborne illness?

Foodborne illness is caused by the consumption of food contaminated with germs or their toxins.

There are five major foodborne bacteria that, taken together, probably account for the majority of cases of foodborne illness – salmonella, campylobacter, E. coli O157, Listeria monocytogenes and Clostridium perfringens . They are important either because they cause a lot of cases of intestinal illness or because they cause severe disease, or both. Viruses may also cause foodborne disease but they are much more often spread from person to person.

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Measuring foodborne illness levels

When people get an attack of diarrhoea and vomiting, they tend to think they are ill because of something they ate, but data suggests that at least 50% of cases are not related to food. Even when a foodborne germ such as salmonella or E. coli O157 is found, we can not be sure it has come from food that has been eaten. It may have come from someone else who was ill, a pet or other animal, or an environment contaminated with animal faeces, for example.

This means we can't be sure exactly how many cases of food poisoning there are. Unless people who are suspected of having food poisoning provide a stool sample for testing we do not know if they have one of these foodborne germs. But there are ways in which we can make reasonable estimates of trends and tell whether the number of cases is going up or down.

Although only a minority of cases result in a positive laboratory report, studies have shown that the system provides a reliable indication of trends in salmonella, campylobacter and E. coli O157. Because of its severity, we think that listeria is also picked up well using this approach. The system is probably not so good at detecting Clostridium perfringens , but it is an important cause of outbreaks.

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The Agency's foodborne illness baseline

The Agency's success in achieving its target to reduce foodborne illness by 20% over five years will be assessed on the basis of the number of laboratory reports of the five main foodborne bacteria (salmonella, campylobacter, E. coli O157, listeria and Clostridium perfringens ) recorded each year over the five year period. We have excluded from this figure the cases reported as having been acquired abroad.

In adopting this approach, we recognise that the baseline figure will include only a small proportion of all the actual cases, since most are not confirmed by laboratory testing. However, in assessing progress towards the target, we only really need a reliable way of monitoring the trend in confirmed laboratory notifications.

Based on the cases reported in 2000, the baseline figure is 65,209.

All cases (including those from food eaten abroad)


 
UK
England and Wales
Scotland
N. Ireland
Salmonella
16,987
14,844
1,723
420
Campylobacter
62,867
55,376
6,482
1,009
E.coli O157
1,147
896
197
54
Clostridium perf.
166
124
32
10
Listeria
113
98
11
4
Total
81,280
71,338
8,445
1,497

Cases not thought to have been acquired abroad


 
UK
England and Wales
Scotland
N. Ireland
Salmonella
13,122
11,456
1,338
328
Campylobacter
50,773
43,415
6,359
999
E. coli O157
1,035
790
196
49
Clostridium perf.
166
124
32
10
Listeria
113
98
11
4
Total
65,209
55,883
7,936
1,390 Back to top

See also

Foodborne Disease Strategy Consultative Group (FDS CG)

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