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  1. Article: Insights into the Microbiological Safety of Wooden Cutting Boards Used for Meat Processing in Hong Kongs Wet Markets: A Focus on Food-Contact Surfaces, Cross-Contamination and the Efficacy of Traditional Hygiene Practices

    Sekoai, Patrick T. / Feng, Shiqi / Zhou, Wenwen / Ngan, Wing Y. / Pu, Yang / Yao, Yuan / Pan, Jie / Habimana, Olivier

    Microorganisms. 2020 Apr. 17, v. 8, no. 4

    2020  

    Abstract: ... used for cleaning wooden cutting boards in Hong Kongs wet markets expose the surfaces to potentially ... in Hong Kongwet markets so as to prevent cross-contamination events. The establishment of proper hygiene ... Hong Kongs wet markets play a crucial role in the country’s supply of safe, fresh meat to satisfy ...

    Abstract Hong Kongs wet markets play a crucial role in the country’s supply of safe, fresh meat to satisfy the dietary needs of its population. Whilst food safety regulations have been introduced over the past few years to maintain the microbial safety of foods sold from these wet markets, it remains unclear whether the hygiene maintenance that is performed on the wooden cutting boards used for meat-processing is effective. In fact, hygiene maintenance may often be overlooked, and hygiene standards may be insufficient. If so, this may lead to the spread of harmful pathogens through cross-contamination, thereby causing severe risks to public health. The aim of this study was to determine the level of microbial transfer between wooden cutting boards and swine meat of various qualities, using 16S metagenomic sequencing, strain identification and biofilm screening of isolated strains. The results established that: (a) the traditional hygiene practices used for cleaning wooden cutting boards in Hong Kongs wet markets expose the surfaces to potentially harmful microorganisms; (b) the processing of microbially contaminated meat on cutting boards cleaned using traditional practices leads to cross-contamination; and (c) several potentially pathogenic microorganisms found on the cutting boards have good biofilm-forming abilities. These results reinforce the need to review the traditional methods used to clean wooden cutting boards after the processing of raw meat in Hong Kongwet markets so as to prevent cross-contamination events. The establishment of proper hygiene protocols may reduce the spread of disease-causing microorganisms (including antibiotic-resistant microorganisms) in food-processing environments.
    Keywords antibiotic resistance ; biofilm ; cross contamination ; food safety ; hygiene ; meat processing ; metagenomics ; microbiological quality ; pork ; public health ; raw meat ; China
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2020-0417
    Publishing place Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2720891-6
    ISSN 2076-2607
    ISSN 2076-2607
    DOI 10.3390/microorganisms8040579
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article: Insights into the microbiological safety of wooden cutting boards used for meat processing in Hong Kongs wet markets: A focus on food-contact surfaces, cross-contamination and the efficacy of traditional hygiene practices

    Sekoai, Patrick T. / Feng, Shiqi / Zhou, Wenwen / Ngan, Wing Y. / Pu, Yang / Yao, Yuan / Pan, Jie / Habimana, Olivier

    Microorg.

    Abstract: ... used for cleaning wooden cutting boards in Hong Kongs wet markets expose the surfaces to potentially ... in Hong Kongwet markets so as to prevent cross-contamination events. The establishment of proper hygiene ... Hong Kongs wet markets play a crucial role in the country’s supply of safe, fresh meat to satisfy ...

    Abstract Hong Kongs wet markets play a crucial role in the country’s supply of safe, fresh meat to satisfy the dietary needs of its population. Whilst food safety regulations have been introduced over the past few years to maintain the microbial safety of foods sold from these wet markets, it remains unclear whether the hygiene maintenance that is performed on the wooden cutting boards used for meat-processing is effective. In fact, hygiene maintenance may often be overlooked, and hygiene standards may be insufficient. If so, this may lead to the spread of harmful pathogens through cross-contamination, thereby causing severe risks to public health. The aim of this study was to determine the level of microbial transfer between wooden cutting boards and swine meat of various qualities, using 16S metagenomic sequencing, strain identification and biofilm screening of isolated strains. The results established that: (a) the traditional hygiene practices used for cleaning wooden cutting boards in Hong Kongs wet markets expose the surfaces to potentially harmful microorganisms; (b) the processing of microbially contaminated meat on cutting boards cleaned using traditional practices leads to cross-contamination; and (c) several potentially pathogenic microorganisms found on the cutting boards have good biofilm-forming abilities. These results reinforce the need to review the traditional methods used to clean wooden cutting boards after the processing of raw meat in Hong Kongwet markets so as to prevent cross-contamination events. The establishment of proper hygiene protocols may reduce the spread of disease-causing microorganisms (including antibiotic-resistant microorganisms) in food-processing environments.
    Keywords covid19
    Publisher WHO
    Document type Article
    Note WHO #Covidence: #72282
    Database COVID19

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  3. Article ; Online: Insights into the Microbiological Safety of Wooden Cutting Boards Used for Meat Processing in Hong Kong’s Wet Markets

    Patrick T. Sekoai / Shiqi Feng / Wenwen Zhou / Wing Y. Ngan / Yang Pu / Yuan Yao / Jie Pan / Olivier Habimana

    Microorganisms, Vol 8, Iss 579, p

    A Focus on Food-Contact Surfaces, Cross-Contamination and the Efficacy of Traditional Hygiene Practices

    2020  Volume 579

    Abstract: ... used for cleaning wooden cutting boards in Hong Kongs wet markets expose the surfaces to potentially ... in Hong Kongwet markets so as to prevent cross-contamination events. The establishment of proper hygiene ... Hong Kongs wet markets play a crucial role in the country’s supply of safe, fresh meat to satisfy ...

    Abstract Hong Kongs wet markets play a crucial role in the country’s supply of safe, fresh meat to satisfy the dietary needs of its population. Whilst food safety regulations have been introduced over the past few years to maintain the microbial safety of foods sold from these wet markets, it remains unclear whether the hygiene maintenance that is performed on the wooden cutting boards used for meat-processing is effective. In fact, hygiene maintenance may often be overlooked, and hygiene standards may be insufficient. If so, this may lead to the spread of harmful pathogens through cross-contamination, thereby causing severe risks to public health. The aim of this study was to determine the level of microbial transfer between wooden cutting boards and swine meat of various qualities, using 16S metagenomic sequencing, strain identification and biofilm screening of isolated strains. The results established that: (a) the traditional hygiene practices used for cleaning wooden cutting boards in Hong Kongs wet markets expose the surfaces to potentially harmful microorganisms; (b) the processing of microbially contaminated meat on cutting boards cleaned using traditional practices leads to cross-contamination; and (c) several potentially pathogenic microorganisms found on the cutting boards have good biofilm-forming abilities. These results reinforce the need to review the traditional methods used to clean wooden cutting boards after the processing of raw meat in Hong Kongwet markets so as to prevent cross-contamination events. The establishment of proper hygiene protocols may reduce the spread of disease-causing microorganisms (including antibiotic-resistant microorganisms) in food-processing environments.
    Keywords Hong Kong’s wet markets ; wooden cutting board ; traditional hygiene practices ; foodborne pathogens ; biofilms ; Biology (General) ; QH301-705.5
    Subject code 670
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-04-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher MDPI AG
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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