1. Evaluation of the impact on human salmonellosis of control measures targeted to Salmonella Enteritidis and Typhimurium in poultry breeding using time-series analysis and intervention models in France.
- Author
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Poirier E, Watier L, Espie E, Weill FX, De Valk H, and Desenclos JC
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Eggs microbiology, Food Microbiology, France epidemiology, Humans, Poultry, Poultry Diseases epidemiology, Poultry Diseases microbiology, Salmonella Food Poisoning epidemiology, Salmonella Infections, Animal epidemiology, Salmonella Infections, Animal microbiology, Salmonella Infections, Animal prevention & control, Poultry Diseases prevention & control, Salmonella Food Poisoning prevention & control, Salmonella Infections, Animal transmission, Salmonella enteritidis isolation & purification, Salmonella typhimurium isolation & purification
- Abstract
In France, salmonellosis is the main cause of foodborne bacterial infection with serotypes Enteritis (SE) and Typhimurium (ST) accounting for 70% of all cases. French authorities implemented a national control programme targeting SE and ST in poultry and eggs from October 1998 onwards. A 33% decrease in salmonellosis has been observed since implementation. We designed an evaluation of the impact of this control programme on SE and ST human infections in France. Using monthly Salmonella human isolate reports to the National Reference Centre we defined two intervention series (SE and ST) and one control series comprising serotypes not know to be associated with poultry or eggs. The series, from 1992 to 2003, were analysed using autoregressive moving average models (ARMA). To test the hypothesis of a reduction of SE and ST human cases >0 after the programme started and to estimate its size, we introduced an intervention model to the ARMA modelling. In contrast to the control series, we found an annual reduction of 555 (95% CI 148-964) SE and of 492 (95% CI 0-1092) ST human infections, representing respectively a 21% and 18% decrease. For SE, the decrease occurred sharply after implementation while for ST, it followed a progressive decrease that started early in 1998. Our study, suggests a true relation between the Salmonella control programme and the subsequent decrease observed for the two targeted serotypes. For ST, however, the decrease prior to the intervention may also reflect control measures implemented earlier by the cattle and milk industry.
- Published
- 2008
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