A government-funded study on the potential for cross-contaminating kitchen surfaces with pathogens during food preparation has pointed to an unlikely culprit for spreading sickness: spice containers.
Detailing findings in the Journal of Food Protection,
Donald Schaffner, a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Food Science
at the Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences who co-authored
the study in collaboration with North Carolina State University colleagues,
concluded that when consumers are preparing meals, spice containers can easily
become cross-contaminated with health-threatening microorganisms.
Cross-contamination is the process by which microbes are transferred from one substance
or object to another, often with harmful effects.
The study was commissioned by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Service.
"In addition to more obvious surfaces like
cutting boards, garbage can lids and refrigerator handles, here's something
else that you need to pay attention to when you're trying to be clean and
sanitary in your kitchen," Schaffner said. "Our research shows that
any spice container you touch when you're preparing raw meat might get
cross-contaminated. You'll want to be conscious of that during or after meal
preparation."
Foodborne illnesses such as non-typhoidal Salmonella
and Campylobacter account for nearly 2 million infections per year in the U.S.,
according to studies by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). A significant portion of those illnesses are derived from USDA-regulated
food products, including chicken, turkey, beef, pork and game, according to the
Interagency Food Safety Analytics Collaboration, a group formed in 2011 by the
CDC, the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service and the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. Scientists said they believe proper handling of food --
including adequate cooking, consistent handwashing and sanitizing of kitchen
surfaces and utensils -- can combat cross-contamination.
"The purpose of this study was to determine the
prevalence and degree of cross-contamination across a variety of kitchen
surfaces during a consumer meal preparation event," said Schaffner, who
also is the Rutgers Agricultural Experiment Station's Extension Specialist in
Food Science.
Researchers monitored the behavior of 371 adults
cooking an identical turkey burger recipe in several kitchens of various sizes,
ranging from small apartment-style kitchens to larger teaching kitchens, in
extension centers and food banks. Participants prepared a meal consisting of
raw ground turkey patties with a seasoning recipe, along with a prepackaged
salad. To simulate the movement of a pathogen across a kitchen, researchers inoculated
the meat ahead of time with a bacteriophage known as "MS2" to serve
as a safe tracer. Bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria and have no
effect on humans.
Participants weren't informed that researchers would
be examining their food safety behaviors until after they had prepared the
meal. Once the meal had been prepared, researchers swabbed kitchen utensils,
cleaning areas and kitchen surfaces to test for the presence of the MS2 tracer.
Based on observations of participants' behavior during cooking, researchers
decided to take samples from some new categories of surfaces, such as spice
containers and sink faucet handles.
The researchers found the most frequently contaminated
objects were spice containers, with about 48 percent of the samples showing
evidence of MS2 contamination. This prevalence of contamination was
significantly different from many other surfaces sampled. Cutting boards and
trash can lids were the second and third most contaminated. Faucet handles were
the least contaminated object studied.
"We were surprised because we had not seen
evidence of spice container contamination before," Schaffner said.
"Most research on the cross-contamination of kitchen surfaces due to
handling of raw meat or poultry products has focused on kitchen cutting boards
or faucet handles and has neglected surfaces like spice containers, trash bin
lids and other kitchen utensils. This makes this study and similar studies from
members of this group more comprehensive than previous studies."
Researchers involved included Benjamin Chapman, professor and department head, Agricultural and Human Sciences, and Lee-Ann Jaykus, the William Neal Reynolds Distinguished Professor, Food, Bioprocessing and Nutrition Sciences, Margaret Kirchner, Savana Everhart, Lindsey Doring, Caitlin Smits, Jeremy Faircloth, Minh Duong, Rebecca Goulter, Lydia Goodson, Lisa Shelley and Ellen Thomas Shumaker, all of North Carolina State University; Sheryl Cates of RTI International; Christopher Bernstein of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau; and Aaron Lavallee of the U.S. De