Albert Venencia, Ramamurthy Thandavarayan, Das Samaresh, G Dolma Karma, Majumdar Tapan, Baruah Pranjal Jyoti, Chaliha Hazarika Suranjana, Apum Basumoti, Das Madhuchhanda
Indian Council of Medical Research, Ansari Nagar East, New Delhi-110029, India.
ICMR-National Institute for Research in Bacterial Infections (NIRBI), Kolkata, West Bengal 700010, India.
Heliyon. 2024 Aug 14;10(16):e36344. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e36344. eCollection 2024 Aug 30.
Foodborne and waterborne diseases and outbreaks are a neglected public health issue worldwide. In developing countries, diarrheal disease caused by foodborne and waterborne infections is a major cause of ill health. There is a lack of information on foodborne pathogens, their transmission routes, outbreaks, and related mortalities, due to the absence of a robust disease surveillance system and adequately equipped laboratories. Although hygiene practices are much better in Western countries, the widespread use of preserved and raw food items is a cause of concern. Consequently, the occurrence of foodborne diseases is not rare in these countries either. WHO has recently released the 'Global Strategy for Food Safety 2022-2030', addressing the emerging challenges, new technologies, and innovative approaches to strengthen food safety systems and enhance laboratory capacity for foodborne disease surveillance. Foodborne outbreaks are a huge challenge in India. Malnutrition, anemia, hookworm and enteric infections, are the predominant cryptic health conditions among children in rural and tribal areas, leading to severe consequences, including death, and posing a substantial threat to public health. Combating such events with adequate food safety and hygiene practices is achievable. Systematic collection of data can help to develop food safety policies that could reduce the burden of foodborne diseases.
This review aims to examine the current situation of foodborne and waterborne diseases, identification of the factors contributing to their occurrence and outbreaks, and defining the gaps in control measures, challenges, and potential solutions in improving the public health system.
Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT) analysis was made based on the literature review of foodborne and waterborne infections to assess the current situation and to identify knowledge gaps.
SWOT analysis showed the strength and gaps in the different national initiatives analogous to the global programs. Though, Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP), Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI), the core Government missions, independently generate substantial information, sporadic and outbreak cases of diarrhea still prevail in the country due to the absence of a systematic national surveillance system. Recently, many government initiatives have been made through Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), G20 goals, etc. However, potential threats such as risk of zoonotic disease transmission to humans, emerging infections and antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and unauthorized activities in the food sector pose a big challenge in safeguarding the public health.
Maintenance of global food safety requires a systematic analysis of present situations, identification of existing shortcomings, and targeted efforts toward prevention of infections. The ongoing G20 mission and the SDGs for 2030 represent significant strides in this direction. To have pathogen-free animals and supply of contamination-free raw foods is impractical, but, mitigating the prevalence of zoonotic diseases can be accomplished by rigorously enforcing hygiene standards throughout the food production chain. A crucial requirement at present is the implementation of integrated laboratory surveillance for foodborne and waterborne infections, as this will provide policymakers and stakeholders all the evidence based scientific information. This system will facilitate efforts in minimizing the risks associated with foodborne and waterborne infections.
食源性和水源性疾病及疫情是全球被忽视的公共卫生问题。在发展中国家,食源性和水源性感染导致的腹泻病是健康不佳的主要原因。由于缺乏健全的疾病监测系统和设备完善的实验室,关于食源性病原体、其传播途径、疫情及相关死亡率的信息匮乏。尽管西方国家的卫生习惯要好得多,但腌制食品和生食的广泛使用令人担忧。因此,这些国家食源性疾病的发生也并不罕见。世界卫生组织最近发布了《2022 - 2030年全球食品安全战略》,以应对新出现的挑战、新技术以及加强食品安全系统和提高食源性疾病监测实验室能力的创新方法。食源性疫情在印度是一个巨大挑战。营养不良、贫血、钩虫和肠道感染是农村和部落地区儿童中主要的隐性健康问题,会导致包括死亡在内的严重后果,并对公众健康构成重大威胁。通过适当的食品安全和卫生措施应对此类事件是可行的。系统收集数据有助于制定可减轻食源性疾病负担的食品安全政策。
本综述旨在研究食源性和水源性疾病的现状,确定导致其发生和疫情的因素,并明确控制措施、挑战及改善公共卫生系统的潜在解决方案方面的差距。
基于对食源性和水源性感染的文献综述进行优势、劣势、机会和威胁(SWOT)分析,以评估现状并确定知识差距。
SWOT分析显示了与全球计划类似的不同国家举措中的优势和差距。尽管综合疾病监测计划(IDSP)、印度食品安全标准管理局(FSSAI)等核心政府任务独立生成了大量信息,但由于缺乏系统的国家监测系统,该国腹泻的散发病例和疫情仍普遍存在。最近,通过可持续发展目标(SDGs)、二十国集团(G20)目标等采取了许多政府举措。然而,人畜共患病传播给人类的风险、新出现的感染和抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)以及食品行业的未经授权活动等潜在威胁,在保障公众健康方面构成了巨大挑战。
维持全球食品安全需要对现状进行系统分析,识别现有缺陷,并针对性地努力预防感染。正在进行的G20任务和2030年可持续发展目标在这一方向上迈出了重要步伐。要拥有无病原体的动物和无污染的生食供应是不切实际的,但通过在整个食品生产链严格执行卫生标准,可以降低人畜共患病的流行率。目前的一项关键要求是实施食源性和水源性感染的综合实验室监测,因为这将为政策制定者和利益相关者提供所有基于证据的科学信息。该系统将有助于努力将与食源性和水源性感染相关的风险降至最低。