University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Division of Environmental Health Sciences, 420 Delaware Street S.E., MMC 807, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455.
National Environmental Health Association, 720 South Colorado Boulevard, 1000N, Denver, Colorado 80246.
J Food Prot. 2022 Jul 1;85(7):1000-1007. doi: 10.4315/JFP-22-007.
A previously conducted national survey of restaurant inspection programs associated the practice of disclosing inspection results to consumers at the restaurant point of service (POS) with fewer foodborne outbreaks. We used data from the national Foodborne Disease Outbreak Surveillance System (FDOSS) to assess the reproducibility of the survey results. Programs that participated in the survey accounted for approximately 23% of the single-state foodborne illness outbreaks in restaurant settings reported to FDOSS during 2016 to 2018. Agencies that disclosed inspection results at the POS reported fewer outbreaks (mean = 0.29 outbreaks per 1,000 establishments) than those that disclosed results online (0.7) or not at all (1.0). Having any grading method for inspections was associated with fewer reported outbreaks than having no grading method. Agencies that used letter grades had the lowest numbers of outbreaks per 1,000 establishments. There was a positive association (correlation coefficient, R2 = 0.29) between the mean number of foodborne illness complaints per 1,000 establishments, per the survey, and the mean number of restaurant outbreaks reported to FDOSS (R2 = 0.29). This association was stronger for bacterial toxin-mediated outbreaks (R2 = 0.35) than for norovirus (R2 = 0.10) or Salmonella (R2 = 0.01) outbreaks. Our cross-sectional study findings are consistent with previous observations that linked the practice of posting graded inspection results at the POS with reduced occurrence of foodborne illnesses and outbreaks associated with restaurants. Support for foodborne illness surveillance programs and food regulatory activities at local health agencies is foundational for food safety systems coordinated at state and federal levels.
先前进行的一项全国性餐馆检查计划调查发现,在餐馆服务点(POS)向消费者披露检查结果与食源性疾病爆发的减少有关。我们使用全国食源性疾病爆发监测系统(FDOSS)的数据来评估调查结果的可重复性。在 2016 年至 2018 年期间,向 FDOSS 报告的餐馆环境中发生的单州食源性疾病爆发中,参与调查的计划约占 23%。在 POS 披露检查结果的机构报告的爆发数量较少(每千家机构 0.29 次爆发),而在线披露结果的机构(0.7)或根本不披露结果的机构(1.0)报告的爆发数量较多。任何一种检查评分方法与报告的爆发数量较少有关,而没有评分方法的机构报告的爆发数量最多。使用字母等级的机构每千家机构的爆发数量最低。调查中每千家机构的食源性疾病投诉数量平均值与 FDOSS 报告的餐馆爆发数量平均值之间存在正相关(相关系数,R2 = 0.29)。这种关联在细菌毒素介导的爆发(R2 = 0.35)中比诺如病毒(R2 = 0.10)或沙门氏菌(R2 = 0.01)爆发更强。我们的横断面研究结果与先前的观察结果一致,即公布 POS 分级检查结果的做法与减少与餐馆相关的食源性疾病和爆发有关。对地方卫生机构的食源性疾病监测计划和食品监管活动的支持是协调州和联邦各级食品安全系统的基础。