Characteristics of Gastroenteritis Outbreaks Investigated in Singapore: 2018–2021

Author:

Fua’di Muhd Tarmidzi1,Er Benjamin1,Lee Sylvester2ORCID,Chan Pei Pei2,Khoo Joanna1,Tan Desmond1,Li Huilin1,Muhammad Imran Roshan2,Raj Pream2,Kurupatham Lalitha2,Lee Vernon2,Tan Li Kiang1,Chan Joanne Sheot Harn13,Li Angela13,Aung Kyaw Thu134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Centre for Food Science, Singapore Food Agency, 7 International Business Park, Techquest, Singapore 609919, Singapore

2. Communicable Disease Division, Ministry of Health, Singapore 169854, Singapore

3. Department of Food Science and Technology, National University of Singapore, 2 Science Drive 2, Singapore 117543, Singapore

4. School of Biological Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, 60 Nanyang Drive, Singapore 637551, Singapore

Abstract

There is a need to study the characteristics of outbreaks via Singapore’s outbreak surveillance system to understand and identify the gaps in food safety for targeted policy interventions due to the increasing trend in gastroenteritis outbreaks and consequential increase in foodborne-related deaths and economic burden on public health systems worldwide. A total of 171 gastroenteritis outbreaks were investigated in Singapore from January 2018 to December 2021. This study analyzed the annual trend of investigated gastroenteritis outbreaks, the proportion of outbreaks by implicated sources of food, and the proportion of the type of pathogens identified from human cases, food samples, and environmental swabs collected from outbreak investigations. Among the foodborne gastroenteritis outbreaks (n = 121) investigated in Singapore, approximately 42.1% of the outbreaks had food prepared by caterers, 14.9% by restaurants, and 12.4% had food prepared by in-house kitchens. Clostridium perfringens and Salmonella were the most common causative pathogens in foodborne outbreaks throughout the analysis period. The food samples and environmental swabs collected were mostly detected for Bacillus cereus. Norovirus was the most common causative pathogen in non-foodborne outbreaks and was mainly attributable to preschools. This highlights the importance of monitoring and educating the catering industry and preschools to prevent future outbreaks.

Funder

Singapore Food Agency

Publisher

MDPI AG

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