A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers. / Olsen, Abbey ; Bonardi, Silvia ; Barco, Lisa ; Sandberg, Marianne ; Langkabel, Nina; Roasto, Mati ; Majewski, Michał ; Brugger, Brigitte ; H. Kautto, Arja ; Blagojevic, Bojan ; B. Cota, Joao ; Nagel-Alne, Gunvor Elise ; Huneau, Adeline ; Laukkanen-Ninios, Riikka; Lebouquin-Leneveu, Sophie ; Alvseike, Ole; Fredriksson-Ahomaa, Maria ; Vieira-Pinto, Madalena ; Kaukonen, Eija .

In: Food Control, Vol. 155, 110059, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Olsen, A, Bonardi, S, Barco, L, Sandberg, M, Langkabel, N, Roasto, M, Majewski, M, Brugger, B, H. Kautto, A, Blagojevic, B, B. Cota, J, Nagel-Alne, GE, Huneau, A, Laukkanen-Ninios, R, Lebouquin-Leneveu, S, Alvseike, O, Fredriksson-Ahomaa, M, Vieira-Pinto, M & Kaukonen, E 2024, 'A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers', Food Control, vol. 155, 110059. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodcont.2023.110059

APA

Olsen, A., Bonardi, S., Barco, L., Sandberg, M., Langkabel, N., Roasto, M., Majewski, M., Brugger, B., H. Kautto, A., Blagojevic, B., B. Cota, J., Nagel-Alne, G. E., Huneau, A., Laukkanen-Ninios, R., Lebouquin-Leneveu, S., Alvseike, O., Fredriksson-Ahomaa, M., Vieira-Pinto, M., & Kaukonen, E. (2024). A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers. Food Control, 155, [110059]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodcont.2023.110059

Vancouver

Olsen A, Bonardi S, Barco L, Sandberg M, Langkabel N, Roasto M et al. A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers. Food Control. 2024;155. 110059. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodcont.2023.110059

Author

Olsen, Abbey ; Bonardi, Silvia ; Barco, Lisa ; Sandberg, Marianne ; Langkabel, Nina ; Roasto, Mati ; Majewski, Michał ; Brugger, Brigitte ; H. Kautto, Arja ; Blagojevic, Bojan ; B. Cota, Joao ; Nagel-Alne, Gunvor Elise ; Huneau, Adeline ; Laukkanen-Ninios, Riikka ; Lebouquin-Leneveu, Sophie ; Alvseike, Ole ; Fredriksson-Ahomaa, Maria ; Vieira-Pinto, Madalena ; Kaukonen, Eija . / A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers. In: Food Control. 2024 ; Vol. 155.

Bibtex

@article{dc79e821ffe940d6aafefee8a1a3e97f,
title = "A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers",
abstract = "Campylobacter is an important foodborne pathogen as it is associated with significant disease burden across Europe. Among various sources, Campylobacter infections in humans are often related to the consumption of undercooked poultry meat or improper handling of poultry meat. Many European countries have implemented measures to reduce human exposure to Campylobacter from broiler meat. In this paper, surveillance programs implemented in some European countries is summarized. Our findings reveal that many European countries test neck skin samples for Campylobacter as per the Process Hygiene Criterion (PHC) set by the European Regulation. Variations to the legal plan are seen in some countries, as in Norway and Iceland, where weekly sampling is performed during infection peak periods only, or in Iceland, where the Campylobacter limit is set at 500 CFU/g instead of 1000 CFU/g. Furthermore, northern European countries have implemented national Campylobacter surveillance plans. Denmark tests cloaca and leg skin samples at the slaughterhouses and meat samples at the retail, while Finland, Norway, and Sweden test caeca at slaughterhouses. In contrast, Iceland tests feces on farms. Iceland and Norway test flocks close to the slaughter date and when a farm tests positive, competent authority implement measures such as logistic slaughter, heat treatment or freeze the meat from these flocks. In Iceland, frozen meat is further processed prior to being put on the market. While the incidence of campylobacteriosis has declined in all European countries except France since the introduction of PHC in 2018, it is uncertain whether this decrease is due to prevalence reduction or underreporting during the COVID-19 pandemic. Future investigations with more comprehensive data, devoid of potential confounding factors, are necessary to validate this potential trend. However, it is evident that the implementation of national action plans can be successful in reducing the incidence of human campylobacteriosis, as demonstrated by Iceland.",
author = "Abbey Olsen and Silvia Bonardi and Lisa Barco and Marianne Sandberg and Nina Langkabel and Mati Roasto and Micha{\l} Majewski and Brigitte Brugger and {H. Kautto}, Arja and Bojan Blagojevic and {B. Cota}, Joao and Nagel-Alne, {Gunvor Elise} and Adeline Huneau and Riikka Laukkanen-Ninios and Sophie Lebouquin-Leneveu and Ole Alvseike and Maria Fredriksson-Ahomaa and Madalena Vieira-Pinto and Eija Kaukonen",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.foodcont.2023.110059",
language = "English",
volume = "155",
journal = "Food Control",
issn = "0956-7135",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A comparison of European surveillance programs for Campylobacter in broilers

AU - Olsen, Abbey

AU - Bonardi, Silvia

AU - Barco, Lisa

AU - Sandberg, Marianne

AU - Langkabel, Nina

AU - Roasto, Mati

AU - Majewski, Michał

AU - Brugger, Brigitte

AU - H. Kautto, Arja

AU - Blagojevic, Bojan

AU - B. Cota, Joao

AU - Nagel-Alne, Gunvor Elise

AU - Huneau, Adeline

AU - Laukkanen-Ninios, Riikka

AU - Lebouquin-Leneveu, Sophie

AU - Alvseike, Ole

AU - Fredriksson-Ahomaa, Maria

AU - Vieira-Pinto, Madalena

AU - Kaukonen, Eija

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Campylobacter is an important foodborne pathogen as it is associated with significant disease burden across Europe. Among various sources, Campylobacter infections in humans are often related to the consumption of undercooked poultry meat or improper handling of poultry meat. Many European countries have implemented measures to reduce human exposure to Campylobacter from broiler meat. In this paper, surveillance programs implemented in some European countries is summarized. Our findings reveal that many European countries test neck skin samples for Campylobacter as per the Process Hygiene Criterion (PHC) set by the European Regulation. Variations to the legal plan are seen in some countries, as in Norway and Iceland, where weekly sampling is performed during infection peak periods only, or in Iceland, where the Campylobacter limit is set at 500 CFU/g instead of 1000 CFU/g. Furthermore, northern European countries have implemented national Campylobacter surveillance plans. Denmark tests cloaca and leg skin samples at the slaughterhouses and meat samples at the retail, while Finland, Norway, and Sweden test caeca at slaughterhouses. In contrast, Iceland tests feces on farms. Iceland and Norway test flocks close to the slaughter date and when a farm tests positive, competent authority implement measures such as logistic slaughter, heat treatment or freeze the meat from these flocks. In Iceland, frozen meat is further processed prior to being put on the market. While the incidence of campylobacteriosis has declined in all European countries except France since the introduction of PHC in 2018, it is uncertain whether this decrease is due to prevalence reduction or underreporting during the COVID-19 pandemic. Future investigations with more comprehensive data, devoid of potential confounding factors, are necessary to validate this potential trend. However, it is evident that the implementation of national action plans can be successful in reducing the incidence of human campylobacteriosis, as demonstrated by Iceland.

AB - Campylobacter is an important foodborne pathogen as it is associated with significant disease burden across Europe. Among various sources, Campylobacter infections in humans are often related to the consumption of undercooked poultry meat or improper handling of poultry meat. Many European countries have implemented measures to reduce human exposure to Campylobacter from broiler meat. In this paper, surveillance programs implemented in some European countries is summarized. Our findings reveal that many European countries test neck skin samples for Campylobacter as per the Process Hygiene Criterion (PHC) set by the European Regulation. Variations to the legal plan are seen in some countries, as in Norway and Iceland, where weekly sampling is performed during infection peak periods only, or in Iceland, where the Campylobacter limit is set at 500 CFU/g instead of 1000 CFU/g. Furthermore, northern European countries have implemented national Campylobacter surveillance plans. Denmark tests cloaca and leg skin samples at the slaughterhouses and meat samples at the retail, while Finland, Norway, and Sweden test caeca at slaughterhouses. In contrast, Iceland tests feces on farms. Iceland and Norway test flocks close to the slaughter date and when a farm tests positive, competent authority implement measures such as logistic slaughter, heat treatment or freeze the meat from these flocks. In Iceland, frozen meat is further processed prior to being put on the market. While the incidence of campylobacteriosis has declined in all European countries except France since the introduction of PHC in 2018, it is uncertain whether this decrease is due to prevalence reduction or underreporting during the COVID-19 pandemic. Future investigations with more comprehensive data, devoid of potential confounding factors, are necessary to validate this potential trend. However, it is evident that the implementation of national action plans can be successful in reducing the incidence of human campylobacteriosis, as demonstrated by Iceland.

U2 - 10.1016/j.foodcont.2023.110059

DO - 10.1016/j.foodcont.2023.110059

M3 - Journal article

VL - 155

JO - Food Control

JF - Food Control

SN - 0956-7135

M1 - 110059

ER -

ID: 367843749