Environmental Public Health Division
Common Foodborne Illnesses
Disease: Staphylococcus (intoxication).
Foods: Cooked ham, meat, poultry, sauces, gravy, egg, and dairy products.
Symptoms: Sudden onset of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramps and dehydration.
Onset: 1 to 6 hours after eating
Prevention: Prompt refrigeration of foods, sanitary food handling. Food handlers with infected wounds or burns should not handle foods.
Disease: Botulism (intoxication)
Foods: Home canned foods, foods left out overnight such as baked potatoes in foil. Vacuum packaging.
Symptoms: Dry mouth double vision, difficulty focusing, trouble speaking, swallowing, breathing. Also nausea, vomiting, stomach cramps, diarrhea
Onset: 12 to 36 hours after eating.
Prevention: Do not use home-canned products, use careful time and temperature controls for all large and bulky foods. Do not use food from dented or damaged cans.
Disease: Clostridium Perfringens Enteris (infection)
Foods: Cooked meat products, poultry, gravy, stew, meat pies.
Symptoms: Diarrhea, stomach pains
Onset: 8 to 22 hours after eating
Prevention: Proper time and temperature control in cooling and reheating cooked meat, poultry, and bean dishes and products to 165° F. Reheat leftover foods to 165° F or above.
Disease: Salmonellosis (Infection)
Foods: Poultry and poultry salads, unpasteurized milk, raw eggs, ad unpasteurized egg products
Symptoms: Stomach pain, diarrhea, nausea, chills, fever, and headache.
Onset: 6 to 72 hours
Prevention: Proper cooking temperatures of poultry, eggs and egg products. Prompt refrigeration of food. Hand washing before and after food preparation.
Disease: Shigellosis (Infection)
Foods: Potato, tuna, shrimp, turkey, macaroni salads, lettuce, moist and mixed foods.
Symptoms: Abdominal pains, diarrhea, fever, chills, vomiting.
Onset: 1 to 7 days after eating.
Prevention: Avoid cross-contamination, avoid fecal contamination from food handlers by practicing good personal hygiene, use sanitary food and water sources, control flies, cool foods rapidly
Disease: Hepatitis A (Infection)
Foods: Shellfish (oysters, clams, mussels, scallops) from polluted water.
Symptoms: Appetite loss, nausea, vomiting, and lethargy. Patient may develop jaundice with darkened urine.
Onset: 2 to 6 weeks after eating.
Prevention: Thoroughly cook shellfish. Wash hands after using bathroom
Disease: E. Coli 0157;H7 Enteritis Escherichia Coli (Infection)
Foods: Raw and undercooked ground beef, and other red meats, imported cheeses, unpasteurized milk.
Symptoms: Severe stomach cramps, bloody diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting.
Onset: 1 to 4 days after eating.
Prevention: Cook ground beef thoroughly to (155° F) for 15 seconds, avoid cross-contamination, avoid fecal contamination from food handlers by practicing good personal hygiene.
Disease: Listeriosis-Monocytogenes.
Foods: Raw and processed meat, pate, raw seafood, coleslaw, soft cheese, unpasteurized milk and cheese made from it.
Symptoms: Fever, chills, headache, vomiting, meningitis, backache
Onset: 1 day to 3 weeks after eating.
Prevention: Avoid unpasteurized milk products. Thoroughly reheat frozen or refrigerated processed meat and poultry products.
Disease: Trichenella Spirallis
Foods: Raw or undercooked meats containing encysted larvae
Symptoms: Muscle soreness and pain
Prevention: Cook all pork to at least 145° F for 15 seconds.
Disease: Norovirus
Foods: clams, oysters, food handled by an infected
person
Symptoms: fever, nausea,
vomiting, abdominal pain, headache
Onset: 10-150 hours
Prevention: proper
handwashing, cook raw shellfish