miércoles, 5 de septiembre de 2018

Infographic Contributing Factors | EHS | CDC

Infographic Contributing Factors | EHS | CDC

Full view of Contributing Factors Infographic page 1

Learn about contributing factors to outbreaks and how you can identify them during outbreak investigations.
  • Each year, more than 800 foodborne illness outbreaks are reported in the United States.
  • More than half of these are linked to restaurants.
What Are Contributing Factors?
Contributing factors are behaviors, practices, and environmental conditions that lead to outbreaks. Knowing the contributing factors can help us stop outbreaks and prevent future ones.
There are 3 types of contributing factors.
  • The first type is contamination (pathogens and other hazards getting into food). A sick food worker handling food with their bare hands is one example of a food preparation practice that contributes to contamination.
  • The second type is proliferation (pathogens in food growing faster). Food held in a refrigerator that is too warm is one example of a food preparation practice that contributes to proliferation.
  • The third type is survival (pathogens surviving a process to kill or reduce them). Food not cooked long enough or to a hot enough temperature are two examples of food preparation practices that contribute to survival.
What Are the Most Common Contributing Factors?
The top four contributing factors for outbreaks in restaurants are
  1. Sick food worker contaminates ready-to-eat food through bare-hand contact.
  2. Sick food worker contaminates food through a method other than hand contact, such as with a utensil they contaminated.
  3. Sick food worker contaminates ready-to-eat food through glove-hand contact.
  4. Food handling practices lead to growth of pathogens, such as food not kept cold enough.
How Do State and Local Food Regulatory Programs Identify Contributing Factors?
Environmental assessments conducted during outbreak investigations identify contributing factors. These assessments help us learn how pathogens are spread in the environment to cause foodborne illness.
State and local food regulatory programs should conduct environmental assessments as soon as they learn a restaurant may be linked with an outbreak.
Environmental assessment activities include
  • Interviewing kitchen managers and food workers
  • Observing how restaurants prepare food (for example, food temperatures)
  • Reviewing or collecting records (for example, records of food cooking temperatures, traceback records)
  • Sampling for pathogens in the restaurant kitchen
What Can You Do To Identify Contributing Factors and Help Prevent Foodborne Illness?
State and local food regulatory programs should
Access these resources and more at www.cdc.gov/nceh/ehs/nears

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