
Salmonella

How do people catch Salmonella?
Salmonella live in the intestinal tracts of humans and other animals, including
birds. Salmonella are usually transmitted to humans by eating foods contaminated
with animal feces. Contaminated foods usually look and smell normal.
Contaminated foods are often of animal origin, such as beef, poultry, milk, or
eggs, but all foods, including vegetables may become contaminated. Many raw
foods of animal origin are frequently contaminated, but fortunately, thorough
cooking kills Salmonella. Food may also become contaminated by the unwashed
hands of an infected food handler, who forgot to wash his or her hands with soap
after using the bathroom.
Salmonella may also be found in the feces of some pets, especially those with
diarrhea, and people can become infected if they do not wash their hands after
contact with these feces. Reptiles are particularly likely to harbor Salmonella
and people should always wash their hands immediately after handling a reptile,
even if the reptile is healthy. Adults should also be careful that children wash
their hands after handling a reptile.
How common is salmonellosis?
Every year, approximately 40,000 cases of salmonellosis are reported in the
United States. Because many milder cases are not diagnosed or reported, the
actual number of infections may be thity or more times greater. Salmonellosis is
more common in the summer than winter.
Children are the most likely to get salmonellosis. Young children, the elderly,
and the immunocompromised are the most likely to have severe infections. It is
estimated that approximately 600 persons die each year with acute salmonellosis.
What can a person do to prevent this illness?
There is no vaccine to prevent salmonellosis. Since foods of animal origin may
be contaminated with Salmonella, people should not eat raw or undercooked eggs,
poultry, or meat. Raw eggs may be unrecognized in some foods such as homemade
hollandaise sauce, caesar and other homemade salad dressings, tiramisu, homemade
ice cream, homemade mayonnaise, cookie dough, and frostings. Poultry and meat,
including hamburgers, should be well-cooked, not pink in the middle. Persons
also should not consume raw or unpasteurized milk or other dairy products.
Produce should be thoroughly washed before consuming.
Cross-contamination of foods should be avoided. Uncooked meats should be keep
separate from produce, cooked foods, and ready-to-eat foods. Hands, cutting
boards, counters, knives, and other utensils should be washed thoroughly after
handling uncooked foods. Hand should be washed before handling any food, and
between handling different food items.
People who have salmonellosis should not prepare food or pour water for others
until they have been shown to no longer be carrying the Salmonella bacterium.
People should wash their hands after contact with animal feces. Since reptiles
are particularly likely to have Salmonella, everyone should immediately wash
their hands after handling reptiles. Reptiles (including turtles) are not
appropriate pets for small children and should not be in the same house as an
infant.
What else can be done to prevent salmonellosis?
It is important for the public health department to know about cases of
salmonellosis. It is important for clinical laboratories to send isolates of
Salmonella to the City, County, or State Public Health Laboratories so the
specific type can be determined and compared with other Salmonella in the
community. If many cases occur at the same time, it may mean that a restaurant,
food or water supply has a problem which needs correction by the public health
department.
Some prevention steps occur everyday without you thinking about it.
Pasteurization of milk and treating municipal water supplies are highly
effective prevention measures that have been in place for many years. In the
1970s, small pet turtles were a common source of salmonellosis in the United
States, and in 1975, the sale of small turtles was halted in this country.
Improvements in farm animal hygiene, in slaughter plant practices, and in
vegetable and fruit harvesting and packing operations may help prevent
salmonellosis caused by contaminated foods. Better education of food industry
workers in basic food safety and restaurant inspection procedures, may prevent
cross-contamination and other food handling errors that can lead to outbreaks.
Wider use of pasteurized egg in restaurants, hospitals, and nursing homes is an
important prevention measure. In the future, irradiation or other treatments may
greatly reduce contamination of raw meat.
Short Video Clips
American Inventor 4/13/06 American Inventor 5/4/06 Final Pitch and testing 5/4/06 Toilet Germs 2 minute video (must see)
NBC News: Germy Purses Science Channel Experiment Mythbusters Experiment Children discussing germs CNN recent Bird Flu evidence
Important links:
Recent research (May 2006) show Indoor air purifiers not so pure (actually dangerous to health)
Air purifiers make SMOG (MSNBC report)
UCLA School of Public Health Testimonial letter
Applied Microbiology paper of 2005 showing aerosol contamination (summary)
Applied Microbiology paper of 2005 showing aerosol contamination (Full text)
Recent (May 23, 2006) Avian Flu update
New York Times Bathroom Toothbrush Article
USA Today toothbrushes being a biohazard article
Oral Health in America: Surgeon General Report
New England Journal of Medicine article associating SARS with toilet flushing
Article from the web site: The Straight Dope
Prof.
Charles Gerba's original 1975 groundbreaking paper on toilet aerosols
Prof. Charles Gerba's original 1975 groundbreaking paper on toilet aerosols (Full text)
American Inventor Judge Doug Hall's MSNBC article

The Pureflush Mechanics (how it works)