miércoles, 4 de junio de 2014

Latest findings on norovirus, leading cause of disease outbreaks from contaminated food in the US

CDC and Food Safety newsletter banner.

June 2014 CDC Vital Signs Report: Preventing Norovirus Outbreaks








New CDC Vital Signs Report

Preventing norovirus infections, food service has a key role

Norovirus often gets attention for outbreaks on cruise ships, but those account for only about 1% of all reported norovirus outbreaks. Norovirus is highly contagious and is the leading cause of disease outbreaks from contaminated food in the United States. Infected food workers are often the source.
June's CDC Vital Signs report presents CDC's latest findings on reported norovirus outbreaks from contaminated food and highlights key recommendations to help the food service industry prevent such outbreaks.
Ways to prevent norovirus outbreaks from food contamination
Get more information:
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Cover photo of Surveillance for Foodborne Disease Outbreaks Annual Report 2012









Outbreaks!

Recent investigations of foodborne outbreaks reported on CDC.gov:

Read full reports of CDC's Annual Summaries of Foodborne Outbreaks.
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Publications

New data on foodborne disease outbreaks, norovirus, and E. coli

Chart showing summary of foodborne disease outbreaks between 2011 and 2012
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Interagency Food Safety Analytics Collaboration








Partners

New web site launched for tri-agency group, Interagency Food Safety Analytics Collaboration (IFSAC)

IFSAC is teaming across agencies to improve coordination of federal food safety analytic efforts and estimates of foodborne illness sources.
Recently, IFSAC--a partnership between CDC, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Food Safety Inspection Service of the United States Department of Agriculture--expanded on the previously used food categories used to estimate attribution. The addition of more botanically correct categories better reflects production practices and postharvest handling systems, and more readily distinguishes FDA- and FSIS-regulated products.

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Protect yourself when eating at restaurants.

Good-to-Know Info

Recent research shows that over half of reported foodborne outbreaks occur in restaurants.
Follow these four simple tips to prevent food poisoning when eating out.
1.      Check inspection scores
2.      Make sure the restaurant is clean
3.      Check that your food is cooked thoroughly
4.      Properly handle your leftovers  
See CDC’s new “Protect Yourself When Eating Out” infographic to learn more about how you can protect yourself and your family from food poisoning.

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