Towards an integrated food safety surveillance system: a simulation study to explore the potential of combining genomic and epidemiological metadata



Hill, AA, Crotta, M, Wall, B, Good, L, O'Brien, SJ ORCID: 0000-0003-2896-8999 and Guitian, J
(2017) Towards an integrated food safety surveillance system: a simulation study to explore the potential of combining genomic and epidemiological metadata. ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 4 (3). 160721-.

[img] Text
160721.full.pdf - Published version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

Foodborne infection is a result of exposure to complex, dynamic food systems. The efficiency of foodborne infection is driven by ongoing shifts in genetic machinery. Next-generation sequencing technologies can provide high-fidelity data about the genetics of a pathogen. However, food safety surveillance systems do not currently provide similar high-fidelity epidemiological metadata to associate with genetic data. As a consequence, it is rarely possible to transform genetic data into actionable knowledge that can be used to genuinely inform risk assessment or prevent outbreaks. Big data approaches are touted as a revolution in decision support, and pose a potentially attractive method for closing the gap between the fidelity of genetic and epidemiological metadata for food safety surveillance. We therefore developed a simple food chain model to investigate the potential benefits of combining 'big' data sources, including both genetic and high-fidelity epidemiological metadata. Our results suggest that, as for any surveillance system, the collected data must be relevant and characterize the important dynamics of a system if we are to properly understand risk: this suggests the need to carefully consider data curation, rather than the more ambitious claims of big data proponents that unstructured and unrelated data sources can be combined to generate consistent insight. Of interest is that the biggest influencers of foodborne infection risk were contamination load and processing temperature, not genotype. This suggests that understanding food chain dynamics would probably more effectively generate insight into foodborne risk than prescribing the hazard in ever more detail in terms of genotype.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: surveillance, food safety, systems analysis
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 06 Apr 2017 14:57
Last Modified: 19 Jan 2023 07:07
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.160721
Related URLs:
URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3006820