Citation
Ponniah, Jeyaletchumi and Robin, Tunung and Paie, Margaret Selina and Chai, Lay Ching and Radu, Son and Cheah, Yoke Kqueen and Mohamad Ghazali, Farinazleen and Nishibuchi, Mitsuaki and Nakaguchi, Yoshitsugu and Malakar, Pradeep
(2011)
Quantitative risk assessment of acquiring listeriosis from consumption of minimally processed vegetables.
International Journal of Food Safety, Nutrition and Public Health, 4 (2/3/4).
pp. 248-263.
ISSN 1479-3911; ESSN: 1479-392X
Abstract
Listeriosis is a serious invasive disease with high fatality rates especially among the vulnerable population. Although the causative pathogen had been detected in several foods in Malaysia, there have so far been no reported cases of listeriosis in Malaysia. The aim of this study was to carry out a quantitative risk assessment to estimate the risk of acquiring listeriosis through the consumption of minimally processed salad vegetables in Malaysia. The probability of illness per serving was calculated using an exponential dose-response model for high-risk and low-risk groups of consumer using the stochastic approach. The risk estimate of acquiring listeriosis for the healthy population was 1.98 × 10–4 per 100,000 population. For susceptible population, the risk estimate was considerably higher, i.e., 0.172 per 100,000 population for AIDS patients, 0.00496 per 100,000 population for diabetics and 0.149 per 100,000 for the elderly population.
Download File
Preview |
|
PDF (Abstract)
Quantitative risk assessment of acquiring listeriosis from consumption of minimally processed vegetables.pdf
Download (182kB)
| Preview
|
|
Additional Metadata
Actions (login required)
|
View Item |