Publication | Closed Access
A Practical Framework for the Construction of a Biotracing Model: Application to <i>Salmonella</i> in the Pork Slaughter Chain
16
Citations
24
References
2011
Year
Monte Carlo ModelBayesian StatisticFood Processing FacilitiesFood ChainData ScienceUncertainty QuantificationManagementFood MicrobiologyBiostatisticsPublic HealthBayesian Hierarchical ModelingPractical FrameworkFoodborne PathogensPredictive AnalyticsBayesian NetworkFoodborne HazardPork Slaughter ChainMathematical ModelsFood SafetyBayesian NetworksMicrobial ContaminationBiotechnologyMicrobiologyBiotracing ModelApproximate Bayesian Computation
A novel purpose of the use of mathematical models in quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) is to identify the sources of microbial contamination in a food chain (i.e., biotracing). In this article we propose a framework for the construction of a biotracing model, eventually to be used in industrial food production chains where discrete numbers of products are processed that may be contaminated by a multitude of sources. The framework consists of steps in which a Monte Carlo model, simulating sequential events in the chain following a modular process risk modeling (MPRM) approach, is converted to a Bayesian belief network (BBN). The resulting model provides a probabilistic quantification of concentrations of a pathogen throughout a production chain. A BBN allows for updating the parameters of the model based on observational data, and global parameter sensitivity analysis is readily performed in a BBN. Moreover, a BBN enables "backward reasoning" when downstream data are available and is therefore a natural framework for answering biotracing questions. The proposed framework is illustrated with a biotracing model of Salmonella in the pork slaughter chain, based on a recently published Monte Carlo simulation model. This model, implemented as a BBN, describes the dynamics of Salmonella in a Dutch slaughterhouse and enables finding the source of contamination of specific carcasses at the end of the chain.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1