New Zealand has a long-running campylobacter infection (campylobacteriosis) epidemic with contaminated fresh chicken meat the major source. This is both the highest impact zoonosis and largest food safety problem in the country. Adding to this burden is the recent rapid emergence of antibiotic resistance in these campylobacter infections acquired from locally-produced chicken. Campylobacteriosis rates halved in 2008, as compared with the previous five years, following the introduction of regulatory limits on allowable contamination levels in fresh chicken meat, with large health and economic benefits resulting. In the following decade, disease rates do not appear to have declined further. The cumulative impact would equate to an estimated 539000 cases, 5480 hospitalisations, 284 deaths, and economic costs of approximately US380 million during the last 10 years (2009-2018). Additional regulatory interventions, that build on previously successful regulations in this country, are urgently needed to control the source of this epidemic.
CITATION STYLE
Baker, M. G., Grout, L., & Wilson, N. (2020). Update on the campylobacter epidemic from chicken meat in New Zealand: The urgent need for an upgraded regulatory response. Epidemiology and Infection. https://doi.org/10.1017/S095026882000299X
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