Abstract

Each year in Europe, meat is associated with 2.3 million foodborne illnesses, with a high contribution from beef meat. Many of these illnesses are attributed to pathogenic bacterial contamination and inadequate operations leading to growth and/or insufficient inactivation occurring along the whole farm-to-fork chain. To ensure consumer health, decision-making processes in food safety rely on Quantitative Microbiological Risk Assessment (QMRA) with many applications in recent decades. The present study aims to conduct a critical analysis of beef QMRAs and to identify future challenges. A systematic approach, the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, was used to collate beef QMRA models, identify steps of the farm-to-fork chain considered, and analyze inputs and outputs included as well as modelling methods. A total of 2343 articles were collected and 67 were selected. These studies focused mainly on western countries and considered Escherichia coli (EHEC) and Salmonella spp. pathogens. Future challenges were identified and included the need of whole-chain assessments, centralization of data collection processes, and improvement of model interoperability through harmonization. The present analysis can serve as a source of data and information to inform QMRA framework for beef meat and will help the scientific community and food safety authorities to identify specific monitoring and research needs.

Highlights

  • Microbial foodborne disease is a major concern in terms of public health due to the high risk of microbial contamination of foods by several types of biological hazards

  • This work will provide to scientists and risk managers an overview of current beef Quantitative Microbiological Risk Assessment (QMRA) studies available with an insight on gaps identified

  • This study aimed to synthetize and analyze available QMRA studies performed for beef meat consumption using a systematic approach to collect exhaustive QMRA studies

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Microbial foodborne disease is a major concern in terms of public health due to the high risk of microbial contamination of foods by several types of biological hazards. 351,000 deaths were associated with food contaminated by enteric pathogens [1]. More precisely in France, a study in progress [3] estimated that the burden of disease associated with beef consumption (due to six bacteria, one virus, and one parasite) was 177,610 [95% CI = 93,890–313,680] illnesses per year among 67 million people, including very mild and severe effects.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call