4 research outputs found
Food hygiene risks and related practices in central South African HIV/AIDS hospices : a qualitative assessment
Published ThesisPeople living with HIV are at risk of many life-threatening opportunistic infections, the
majority of which are caused by exposure to unsafe drinking water and poor hygiene.
In South Africa, hospices were established in response to the growing HIV/AIDS
pandemic. Hospice is both a programme and a philosophy of care that is dedicated
to improving the quality of life for patients with life-threatening illnesses. At the core
of a hospice’s work is the concept of “palliative care”, which is defined by the World
Health Organization (WHO) as the active total care of patients whose disease is not
responsive to curative treatment, and whose goal is the achievement of the best
quality of life for patients and their families. The need for palliative care in South
Africa has increased with the escalation of HIV/AIDS. Moreover, resources to
provide optimum quality healthcare in hospices are very limited.
Food safety, synonymous with food hygiene, embraces all aspects of food
processing, preparation and handling to ensure the safety thereof for consumption
purposes. It has also been defined as the concept that food will not cause harm to
the consumer when it is prepared and/or eaten according to the intended use. The
meals prepared in a hospice have a remarkable associated safety risk, as they are
prepared for vulnerable people who are more susceptible to foodborne illness than
the rest of the population. During food preparation, micro-organisms can
contaminate foods and storage environments, surfaces, tools, equipment and
personnel engaged in handling and production activities (Clayton, Griffith, Price,
Peters 2002 and Legnani, Leoni, Berveglieri, Mirolo and Alvaro 2003). Foodhandling
practices in the domestic kitchen influence the risk of pathogen survival and
multiplication, as well as cross-contamination to other products. Microbiological risk
in the kitchen can be significantly reduced by preparing food properly. People, food
and domestic animals, including water and bioaerosols, introduce pathogens
continually into the home. these potential pathogens can enter the domestic kitchen via various
routes, for example, raw foods and respiratory droplets. Various bacterial species
can reside in the kitchen, food preparation rooms and storage facilities, and can be
direct sources of food contamination. This is a particularly worrying issue for a
hospice setting, where meals are prepared on a regular basis every day. Moreover,
this is of great concern for a hospice set-up that has limited isolation facilities. This
highlights the important role of food handlers in the transmission of foodborne
infections, as the hands are probably the single most important transmission route.
Consequently, the overall aim of the study was to assess food-related hygiene
awareness and practices amongst hospice food handlers, and the associated food
safety interventions. The study also identified the emerging food safety risks,
including the antimicrobial susceptibility profile of potential foodborne pathogens
isolated from the food preparation surfaces in the hospice kitchens and food
handlers. In order to achieve this, the following objectives were defined for the study:
to conduct an investigation into the hygiene awareness amongst staff of HIV/AIDS
hospices using KAP (knowledge, attitudes and practices) as an information collection
tool to characterise each hospice’s microbial profile; to compose and implement an
intervention programme in selected hospices to improve the food safety awareness
and practices; and, lastly, to evaluate the effectiveness of staff’s hygiene awareness
and practice interventions.
With regard to the KAP objective, it was found that the majority (68%) of the food
handlers did not receive food safety training, whilst only 32% of the respondents had
attended at least one formal training course on food hygiene. A descriptive survey of
the food handlers’ knowledge regarding food safety demonstrated the equivalent of
66.8% correct answers. However, a substantial lack of knowledge regarding the
correct temperature for a refrigerator, as well as hot, ready-to-eat food and cold,
ready-to-eat food emerged. This was demonstrated by the fact that respectively only
39% and 32% of the respondents were informed about the correct holding
temperature of hot and cold ready-to-eat food. Again, this shows that the food
handlers in this study had insufficient knowledge regarding time temperature
controls. Similar findings on the lack of adequate knowledge of food handlers regarding
temperature controls have also been reported (Panchal, Bonhote and Dworkin
2013). This particular knowledge gap could possibly be attributed to a lack of training
of food handlers in hospices on this important food-safety control measure. The
majority (64%) of the respondents agreed that preparation of food in advance may
contribute to the risk of food poisoning, whilst 68% of respondents were aware of the
risks related to reheating dishes prior to consumption.
To determine the antimicrobial susceptibility profile of the isolated foodborne
pathogens, the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was determined using the
agar dilution method of the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI). It was
noted with concern that the isolated microbial strains are becoming increasingly drug
resistant. For example, a 100% resistance of Acinetobacter baumannii strains to
cefoxitin was noted. Although gentamicin is one of the most important antibiotics
used in combination with other antibiotics worldwide for the treatment of S. aureus
infections, this antibiotic was predominantly inactive against S. aureus in this study,
since 75% of the organisms were resistant (MIC >16, range ≤0.25 ->16 mg.ml-1).
Oxacillin also proved to have poor activity against the isolated organisms (MIC50 and
MIC90, 8 and >16, range (0.25->16 mg.ml-1) respectively. Transmission of antibioticresistant
bacteria in hospices and other healthcare facilities could be due to
overcrowding and poor hygiene. The development and provision of food safety
training courses are important to achieve behavioural changes, coupled with an
improvement in skills and knowledge.
Focus groups were also conducted with hospice food handlers to explore their food
safety management systems, and to identify perceived barriers to implementing food
safety practices. The following barriers were identified: lack of management support,
inadequate resources, and inconvenient location of the pantry from the kitchen.
Suboptimal kitchen infrastructure was also identified as a hurdle to implement safe
food-handling practices. In response to the increasing need to educate food handlers about their
responsibilities for assuring the safety of food during preparation and handling, food
handler training, based on the WHO’s Five Keys to Safer Foods, was implemented
as an intervention programme. Before training, 32% of food handlers believed that
the same cutting board can be used for raw and cooked foods, provided that it looks
clean, whilst 73% of respondents, after receiving training, knew that this could
hamper food safety. A hazard categorization tool was developed in the course of the
study, and it comprises five focus areas: infrastructure, food preparation facilities,
sanitation, food handler training and hospice management
Microbial hazards associated with food preparation in Central South African HIV/Aids hospices
Thesis (M. Tech.) -- Central University of Technology, Free State, 2010South Africa currently faces one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world. As this prevalence rises, the strain placed on its hospitals is likely to increase due to the shortage of beds. The devastating effects of HIV/AIDS initiated the establishment of a hospice which is a non-governmental organisation whose goal is the provision of care for terminally ill patients, either in their homes, in hospitals or in a hospice’s own in-patients wards. Part of the hospice’s mission is to offer palliative care without charge to anyone who requires it. The basic elements of hospice care include pain and symptom management, provision of support to the bereaving family and promoting a peaceful and dignified death. This also includes the provision of cooked foods to the patients using the kitchen facilities of the hospices for this activity. It is well known that the kitchen is particularly important in the spread of infectious disease in the domestic environment due to many activities that occur in this particular setting.
Food and water safety is especially important to the persons infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or with immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).It is estimated that food-borne pathogens (disease–causing agents) are responsible for 76 million illnesses, some resulting in death, in the United States alone every year. In one study of patients with AIDS, two-thirds had diarrhoeal disease and in two-thirds of these, the following enteric pathogens were identified: Salmonella, Shigella, Listeria, Yersnia, Cryptosporidium, Entamoeba histolylica and Campylobacter sp. In an epidemiological study of patients with HIV infection a close association was found between consumption of raw or partially cooked fish and antimicrobial-resistant Mycobacterium avium complex. Antibiotic resistance in food-borne pathogens has become a reality and this poses a serious threat to the medical fraternity since it diminishes the effectiveness of treatment. This study was undertaken to determine the prevalence of foodborne pathogens including bio aerosols isolated from the kitchen surfaces and food handler’s before and after cooking. The antibiotic resistance of the isolated pathogens was further determined to assess their impact on treatment.
The following microbiota were isolated: Total viable counts (TVC), Coliforms, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas and presumptive Salmonella. The hospices had high counts of E.coli and S.aureus on the cutting boards for the breakfast session compared to the traditional home based kitchens. It was speculated that this could have originated from crosscontamination via the foodhandler’s hands and the food served. It is evident from the results that hospices lack a management system regarding the prevalence of E. coli as it was present on the cutting boards throughout the food preparation sessions. Gram negative organisms (coliform and P. aeruginosa) were in particular both resistant to oxacillin and this pose a great challenge in this particular setting. This can be addressed by putting emphasis on hygiene as a strategy per se for reducing antibiotic resistance
The Knowledge, Attitude, And Practices Of Food Handlers In Central South African Hospices
ArticleThe escalating number of foodborne diseases and food poisoning outbreaks demand a better call for improved food-handling practices. Hospices are typically described as nongovernmental organizations that offer palliative care to terminally ill patients. The majority of hospice food handlers are not trained in food safety aspects, and services are offered on a voluntary basis. In this study, a descriptive survey design comprising of semistructured questionnaire was utilized to assess the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of the hospice food handlers (n = 100) in hospices around Central South Africa. More than half of the participants (68%) had not taken basic food safety training. The average percentage of the correct answers on the knowledge questionnaire was 66.8%. The participants had a mean age of 35 years (SD = 9.27). Attendance of food safety course had a significant effect on both the practices of using gloves to touch or distribute unwrapped foods (χ2 = 8.411, p-value = .012), and washing hands after using gloves (χ2 = 12.560, p-value = .001). The overall KAP mean score was 78.38. A statistically significant difference was found between the trained and untrained food handlers regarding food safety knowledge (p < .001). There was substantial lack of knowledge regarding the correct temperature for a refrigerator including hot ready-to-eat food
Three novel sequencing types from seventeen Staphylococcus aureus genomes isolated from dairy cows milk in the Free State Province of South Africa
DATA AVAILABILITY : This whole-genome sequence project has been registered in DDBJ/ENA/GenBank with the BioProject accession number PRJNA981445. The Genome submission numbers, BioSample accession numbers, and PubMLST isolate IDs are provided in Table 1.Staphylococcus aureus is one of the major pathogens causing bovine mastitis, which results in huge economic losses in the dairy industry worldwide. Here, we report genome sequences of 17 S. aureus strains, with three novel sequencing types (ST8495, ST8500, and ST8501) isolated from the milk of dairy cows with subclinical mastitis.The National Research Foundation (NRF) and Ntelekwane George Khasapane Central University of Technology (CUT).https://journals.asm.org/journal/mraam2024Veterinary Tropical DiseasesSDG-02:Zero HungerSDG-03:Good heatlh and well-bein