| Literature DB >> 19178658 |
Esther van Asselt1, Arnout Fischer, Aarieke E I de Jong, Maarten J Nauta, Rob de Jonge.
Abstract
Cross-contamination and undercooking are major factors responsible for campylobacteriosis and as such should be incorporated in microbiological risk assessment. A previous paper by van Asselt et al.((1)) quantified cross-contamination routes from chicken breast fillet via hand, cutting board, and knife ending up in a prepared chicken-curry salad in the domestic kitchen. The aim of the current article was to validate the obtained transfer rates with consumer data obtained by video observations and microbial analyses of a home prepared chicken-curry salad. Results showed a wide range of microbial contamination levels in the final salad, caused by various cross-contamination practices and heating times varying from 2'44'' to 41'30''. Model predictions indicated that cooking times should be at least 8 minutes and cutting boards need to be changed after cutting raw chicken in order to obtain safe bacterial levels in the final salad. The model predicted around 75% of the variance in cross-contamination behavior. Accuracy of the model can further be improved by including other cross-contamination routes besides hands, cutting boards, and knives. The model proved to be fail-safe, which implies it can be used as a worst-case estimate to assess the importance of cross-contamination in the home.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19178658 DOI: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.2008.01189.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Risk Anal ISSN: 0272-4332 Impact factor: 4.000