Food & Nutrition

What is Foodborne Disease?

General Information: Foodborne Disease

What is foodborne disease? 

Foodborne disease is caused by consuming contaminated foods or beverages.  Many different disease-causing microbes, or pathogens, can contaminate foods, so there are many different foodborne infections.  In addition, poisonous chemicals, or other harmful substances can cause foodborne diseases if they are present in food. 

More than 250 different foodborne diseases have been described.  Most of these diseases are infections, caused by a variety of bacteria, viruses, and parasites that can be foodborne.  Other diseases are poisonings, caused by harmful toxins or chemicals that have contaminated the food, for example, poisonous mushrooms.   These different diseases have many different symptoms, so there is no one \”syndrome\” that is foodborne illness.  However, the microbe or toxin enters the body through the gastrointestinal tract, and often causes the first symptoms there, so nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps and diarrhea are common symptoms in many foodborne diseases. 

Many microbes can spread in more than one way, so we cannot always know that a disease is foodborne.  The distinction matters, because public health authorities need to know how a particular disease is spreading to take the appropriate steps to stop it.  For example, Escherichia coli infections can spread through contaminated food, contaminated drinking water, contaminated swimming water, and from toddler to toddler at a day care center.  Depending on which means of spread caused a case, the measures to stop other cases from occurring could range from removing contaminated food from stores, chlorinating a swimming pool, or closing a child day care center. 

How many cases of foodborne disease are there in the United States? 

An estimated 76 million cases of foodborne disease occur each year in the United States. The great majority of these cases are mild and cause symptoms for only a day or two.  Some cases are more serious, and CDC estimates that there are 325,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths related to foodborne diseases each year.  The most severe cases tend to occur in the very old, the very young, those who have an illness already that reduces their immune system function, and in healthy people exposed to a very high dose of an organism. 

How do public health departments track foodborne diseases? 

Routine monitoring of important diseases by public health departments is called disease surveillance.  Each state decides which diseases are to be under surveillance in that state.  In most states, diagnosed cases of salmonellosis, E. coli and other serious infections are routinely reported to the health department.  The county reports them to the state health department, which reports them to CDC.  Tens of thousands of cases of  these \”notifiable conditions\” are reported every year.  For example, nearly 35,000 cases of Salmonella infection were reported to CDC in 1998. However, most foodborne infections go undiagnosed and unreported, either because the ill person does not see a doctor, or the doctor does not make a specific diagnosis.  Also, infections with some microbes are not reportable in the first place. 

To get more information about infections that might be diagnosed but not reported, CDC developed a special surveillance system called FoodNet.  FoodNet provides the best available information about specific foodborne infections in the United States, and summarizes them in an annual report. 

 In addition to tracking the number of reported cases of individual infections, states also collect information about foodborne outbreaks, and report a summary of that information to CDC.  About 400-500 foodborne outbreaks investigated by local and state health departments are reported each year.  This includes information about many diseases that are not notifiable and thus are not under individual surveillance, so it provides some useful general information about  foodborne diseases.