Publication | Open Access
A multi-state outbreak of <i>Salmonella</i> serotype Thompson infection from commercially distributed bread contaminated by an ill food handler
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Citations
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References
2005
Year
Food ContaminationFood Processing FacilitiesBacterial PathogensFood HandlerFood ControlFood MicrobiologyInfection ControlPublic HealthHealth SciencesFoodborne PathogensIll Food HandlerFoodborne HazardNutrition Food SafetyFood Safety Risk AssessmentEpidemiologyFood SafetyMulti-state OutbreakFoodborne TransmissionFoodborne IllnessPathogenesisMicrobiology
Foodborne transmission is estimated to account for 95% of non-typhoidal Salmonella infections reported in the United States; however, outbreaks of salmonellosis are rarely traced to food handlers. In August 2000, an increase in Salmonella serotype Thompson infection was noted in Southern California; most of the cases reported eating at a restaurant chain (Chain A) before illness onset. A case-control study implicated the consumption of burgers at Chain A restaurants. The earliest onset of illness was in a burger bun packer at Bakery B who had not eaten at Chain A but had worked while ill. Bakery B supplied burger buns to some Chain A restaurants in Southern California and Arizona. This outbreak is notable for implicating a food handler as the source of food contamination and for involving bread, a very unusual outbreak vehicle for Salmonella . Inadequate food-handler training as well as delayed reporting to the health department contributed to this outbreak.
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