Comparative history of Campylobacter contamination on chicken meat and campylobacteriosis cases in the United States: 1994–2018

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2021.109075Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Chicken meat samples were collected at both slaughter and/or retail since 1994.

  • The United States has an active surveillance system for campylobacteriosis cases.

  • Trends in Campylobacter-chicken and campylobacteriosis cases are compared.

  • Campylobacter-chicken and campylobacteriosis cases declined from 1994 to 2005.

  • Additional reductions on chicken meat were observed between 2013 and 2018.

Abstract

In many countries campylobacteriosis ranks as one of the most frequently reported foodborne illnesses and poultry is the commodity that is most often associated with these illnesses. Nevertheless, efforts to reduce the occurrence of pathogen contamination on poultry are often more focused on Salmonella. While some control measures are pathogen specific, such as pre-harvest vaccination for Salmonella, improvements in sanitary dressing and interventions applied during the slaughter process can be effective against all forms of microbial contamination. To investigate the potential effectiveness of these non-specific pathogen reduction strategies in the United States, it is helpful to assess if, and by how much, Campylobacter contamination of chicken meat has changed across time. This study assesses change considering data collected in both slaughter and retail establishments and comparing observed trends in contamination with trends in human surveillance data. The results support the assertion that substantial reductions in Campylobacter contamination of chicken meat in the late 1990s and early 2000s contributed to a reduction in the human case rate of campylobacteriosis. Further reductions in chicken meat contamination between 2013 and 2018 are more difficult to associate with trends in human illnesses, with one contributing factor being the inclusion of culture independent diagnostic test results in the official case counts during that time. Other contributing factors are discussed.

Keywords

Foodborne pathogens
Surveillance
Poultry
Interventions

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