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food poisoning |
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food poisoningAny acute illness characterized by vomiting and diarrhoea and caused by eating food contaminated with harmful bacteria (for example, listeriosis), poisonous food (for example, certain mushrooms or puffer fish), or poisoned food (such as lead or arsenic introduced accidentally during processing). A frequent cause of food poisoning is Salmonella bacteria. Salmonella comes in many forms, and strains are found in cattle, pigs, poultry, and eggs. Some people are more susceptible to food poisoning than others, and extra care is taken with food products designed for babies, pregnant women, or elderly people. Many types of bacteria can cause food poisoning and the incubation periods, symptoms, and methods of control vary. Under cooking poultry that has not been properly thawed is a common cause of food poisoning. Attacks of salmonella also come from contaminated eggs that have been eaten raw or cooked only lightly. Pork may carry the roundworm Trichinella, and rye the parasitic fungus ergot. The most dangerous food poison is the bacillus that causes botulism. This is rare but leads to muscle paralysis and often death. Food irradiation is intended to prevent food poisoning.
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| Because much food is imported and exported throughout the world, including to and from industrialized nations, some basic discussion of the extent of foodborne illness in different parts of the world, and the resulting risk to the overall food supply, would have helped to frame the need for the book and the resources many health departments are putting toward foodborne illness. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that 76 million Americans become sick, more than 325,000 are hospitalized, and 5,000 die from foodborne illness each year. But as assisted living facilities pioneer innovative meal-delivery models to woo and wow residents, a foodborne illness outbreak is always a looming crisis waiting to happen. |
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