Nutrition and food safety

TOPIC

Nutrition and food safety

Nutrition and food safety

Nutrition is one main exposure to chemical and microbiological risks that can produce effects on men’s and animals health. The size of the global food industry, its production volume, the technologies for transforming raw materials and their connections with environmental problems, all of them are a major threat to the food chain with risks to the food safety. Nutrition is also the way we get nutrients for our life and wellbeing. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), one third of cardiovascular and oncological diseases can be prevented by eating healthy, and each year an estimated 600 millions people in the world fall ill after consuming contaminated food.

Integrating and covering all aspects of the relationship between food and health on the whole food chain, from production to consumption, is the driving principle of the European policy and that followed by the Istituto Superiore di Sanità (ISS, the National Institute of Health in Italy) in a uniform and interdisciplinary way in the field of food safety, food-borne diseases (FBD), diet-related diseases, and prevention of chronic degenerative diseases.

The ISS research generates knowledge that inform public health actions on chemical and microbiological aspects of food safety, prevention and control of zoonoses and FBD, emerging toxicological risks (endocrine disruptors, nanotechnologies), healthy eating habits as the Mediterranean diet, coeliac disease, food allergies and intolerances, and nutrition strategies to prevent obesity and non-communicable chronic diseases.

ISS hosts national and European Reference Laboratories that provide coordination assistance in numerous fields of food safety, carry on training, consultancy and assessment activities to support the National Health Service (SSN), and participate with its experts to many national and international bodies as the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), the Codex Alimentarius, and the European Committee for Standardization (CEN).



Back La SEU in Italia


Nel periodo 2010-2015 sono stati riportati al Registro Italiano SEU, 322 casi di malattia pari a 54 casi in media per anno. Dall’avvio della sorveglianza nel 1988, il numero di casi segnalati al Registro SEU è andato crescendo nel corso degli anni (Figura 27). I casi riportati in Italia sono stati segnalati da 24 diversi centri ospedalieri.
Nel 74% dei casi di SEU è stata riscontrata infezione da stipiti VTEC appartenenti complessivamente a 20 differenti sierogruppi. Negli ultimi anni il sierogruppo responsabile del maggior numero di cluster di casi è stato VTEC O26, seguito da VTEC O157.
Nel corso del periodo di sorveglianza sono stati identificati sul territorio nazionale quattro episodi epidemici di SEU (Lombardia - 1992 (9 casi); triveneto ed Emilia-Romagna - 1993 (15 casi); Napoli - 1997 (3 casi); provincia di Salerno - 2005 (3 casi)) e 17 cluster familiari di infezioni da VTEC.



Dipartimenti/Centri/Servizi

Departments Food safety, nutrition and veterinary public health

Target

Citizen Healthcare professional Information specialist

Topics

Food-borne diseases National networks Rare diseases Zoonoses