Abstract

We estimated for Australia the number of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths due to foodborne gastroenteritis in a typical year, circa 2000. The total amount of infectious gastroenteritis was measured by using a national telephone survey. The foodborne proportion was estimated from Australian data on each of 16 pathogens. To account for uncertainty, we used simulation techniques to calculate 95% credibility intervals (CrI). The estimate of incidence of gastroenteritis in Australia is 17.2 million (95% confidence interval 14.5-19.9 million) cases per year. We estimate that 32% (95% CrI 24%-40%) are foodborne, which equals 0.3 (95% CrI 0.2-0.4) episodes per person, or 5.4 million (95% CrI 4.0-6.9 million) cases annually in Australia. Norovirus, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, Campylobacter spp., and Salmonella spp. cause the most illnesses. In addition, foodborne gastroenteritis causes approximately 15,000 (95% CrI 11,000-18,000) hospitalizations and 80 (95% CrI 40-120) deaths annually. This study highlights global public health concerns about foodborne diseases and the need for standardized methods, including assessment of uncertainty, for international comparison.

Keywords

NorovirusCampylobacterSalmonellaEnvironmental healthConfidence intervalIncidence (geometry)MedicineAcute gastroenteritisPublic healthVeterinary medicineDiarrheaEpidemiologyOutbreakPediatricsBiologyVirologyInternal medicine

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
article
Volume
11
Issue
8
Pages
1257-1264
Citations
230
Access
Closed

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Gillian Hall, Martyn Kirk, Niels G. Becker et al. (2005). Estimating Foodborne Gastroenteritis, Australia. Emerging infectious diseases , 11 (8) , 1257-1264. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1108.041367

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DOI
10.3201/eid1108.041367