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Multistate and Nationwide Foodborne Outbreak Investigations: A Step-by-Step Guide

In recent years, large multi-state or nationwide foodborne outbreaks have become more commonly recognized. Improved surveillance systems in the United States are better at identifying outbreaks that would previously have been missed. Changing patterns in global food production have resulted in food being distributed over large distances. This combined with increasing integration and consolidation of agriculture and food production can result in a contaminated food rapidly causing a geographically widespread outbreak.

Public health officials investigate outbreaks to control them, to prevent additional illnesses, and to learn how to prevent similar outbreaks from happening in the future. Here we explain how the public health community detects, investigates, and controls foodborne disease outbreaks.

Steps in Investigating Foodborne Outbreaks

A foodborne outbreak investigation goes through several steps. They are described here in order, but in reality investigations are dynamic and several steps may happen at the same time.

  1. Detecting a Possible Outbreak
  2. Defining and Finding Cases
  3. Generating Hypotheses about Likely Sources
  4. Testing the Hypotheses
  5. Finding the Point of Contamination
  6. Controlling an Outbreak
  7. Deciding an Outbreak is Over

Steps in Investigating Foodborne Outbreaks [PDF – 1 page]

Steps in an outbreak investigation. 1.Detecting a possible outbreak 2.Finding cases in an outbreak 3.Generating hypotheses through interviews 4.Test hypotheses through analytic studies and lab testing. 5.Solve Point of contamination and original source of outbreak vehicle 6.Controlling outbreak though recalls, facility improvements and industry collaboration. 7.Deciding an outbreak is over.
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