Gangarosa Department of Environmental Health, Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, 1518 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Biotechnology Center, Universidade Eduardo Mondlane, Maputo, Mozambique.
Int J Food Microbiol. 2025 Jan 16;427:110960. doi: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2024.110960. Epub 2024 Nov 3.
The burden of foodborne disease due to the consumption of animal-sourced foods is substantial in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Open air markets, while providing fresh and affordable foods, often have unhygienic practices that may contribute to contamination during the slaughter and processing of chicken meat. This study examines whether and how the common practice of rinse water (stored water used for rinsing broiler carcasses during processing) reuse leads to accumulation of pathogens, with potential cross contamination of chicken meat. To assess the accumulation of Campylobacter jejuni/coli, Salmonella spp., and the indicator of fecal contamination, Escherichia coli, in rinse water used during the slaughtering process at open air food markets in Maputo, Mozambique. We conducted a time-series study at three open air food markets. In a first experiment, we collected paired rinse water (N = 70), water used for chicken processing, and broiler chicken carcass (N = 60) samples from 10 vendors at 75-min intervals starting prior to any processing activity. In a second experiment, we collected 100, 50 mL rinse water samples, immediately before and after processing, from 10 vendors. Chicken processing activity and associated hygiene practices were captured through direct observation. Vendors processed 24 chickens per day, on average. In the first experiment, C. jejuni/coli and E. coli were detected in 30 % and 80 % of rinse water samples, respectively, prior to processing (baseline), and no Salmonella was detected. After the first carcass rinse, C. jejuni/coli and E. coli were detected in 100 % of samples, and Salmonella spp. was detected in 42 % of rinse water samples and 48 % of carcass samples. C. jejuni/coli showed an average 0.1 log copies (95 % CI 0.0, 0.2) increase in rinse water and carcass samples every 75 min. In the second experiment, no C. jejuni/coli or Salmonella spp. were detected in baseline rinse water samples, and E. coli were detected in 78 % of baseline rinse water samples. After processing the first carcass, C. jejuni/coli were detected in 100 % of remaining samples, Salmonella spp. were detected in 28 % of pre-final rinse and 36 % of post-final rinse samples, and E. coli were detected in 81 % of pre-final rinse and 100 % of post-final rinse samples. Our results reveal that consumers are at a high risk of purchasing chicken meat contaminated with human enteropathogens. Once contaminated, rinse water stays contaminated throughout the day. Low-cost and feasible interventions implemented at the carcass wash step are needed to reduce microbial hazards on chicken meat before purchase.
由于食用动物源食品而导致的食源性疾病负担在中低收入国家(LMICs)很大。露天市场虽然提供新鲜且价格合理的食品,但往往存在不卫生的做法,这可能导致鸡肉在屠宰和加工过程中受到污染。本研究旨在探讨在露天食品市场中,鸡肉加工过程中常用的冲洗水(在加工过程中用于冲洗肉鸡胴体的储存水)再利用是否会导致病原体积累,以及是否会潜在地导致鸡肉交叉污染。本研究旨在评估莫桑比克马普托市露天食品市场屠宰过程中使用的冲洗水中弯曲杆菌/大肠杆菌、沙门氏菌和粪便污染指示物大肠杆菌的积累情况。我们在三个露天食品市场进行了时间序列研究。在第一个实验中,我们从 10 个摊主处采集了配对的冲洗水(N=70)、鸡肉加工用水和肉鸡胴体(N=60)样本,在开始任何加工活动之前,每隔 75 分钟采集一次样本。在第二个实验中,我们从 10 个摊主处采集了 100 个 50ml 的冲洗水样本,分别在加工前和加工后立即采集。通过直接观察捕捉鸡肉加工活动和相关卫生实践。摊主平均每天处理 24 只鸡。在第一个实验中,在加工前(基线),冲洗水中分别检测到 30%和 80%的 C. jejuni/coli 和 E. coli,未检测到沙门氏菌。在第一次胴体冲洗后,100%的样本中检测到 C. jejuni/coli 和 E. coli,42%的冲洗水样本和 48%的胴体样本中检测到沙门氏菌。C. jejuni/coli 在每 75 分钟增加 0.1 个对数拷贝(95%CI 0.0,0.2)。在第二个实验中,基线冲洗水中未检测到 C. jejuni/coli 或沙门氏菌,78%的基线冲洗水中检测到 E. coli。处理第一只胴体后,100%的剩余样本中检测到 C. jejuni/coli,28%的预终冲洗和 36%的后终冲洗样本中检测到沙门氏菌,81%的预终冲洗和 100%的后终冲洗样本中检测到 E. coli。我们的结果表明,消费者在购买受人类肠道病原体污染的鸡肉方面面临很高的风险。一旦受到污染,冲洗水在一整天都会保持污染状态。在购买前,需要在胴体清洗步骤实施低成本且可行的干预措施,以减少鸡肉上的微生物危害。