Output list
Other learning objects
Food Safety in a Minute Index, 2018-2023
Published 05/2023
Index with QR code for the Food Safety in a Minute Podcast, 2019-2023.
Conference presentation
Leveraging the Rapidly Changing World of Broadband: Food Safety Education
Date presented 05/2022
2022 National Health Outreach: Today’s Health in a Changing World …. Be the Difference, 05/04/2022–05/06/2022, Kansas City, Missouri
Digital technology is omnipresent. Spurred by the pandemic, Americans will continue to spend substantial time at home – learning about and solving health concerns, using applications, online learning, along with digital devices to improve health literacy. More Americans expect to be lifelong learners at internet speed and internet scale. Effective internet/broadband education requires content generation, alongside structural coordination of digital platforms. To meet these trends, health literacy programming must develop systematic approaches and digital communications networks pushing research/evidence-based information to Americans. This presentation highlights best practices, broadband/social media strategies, and evaluation of the Food Safety in a Minute Program. Explore, learn about, and analyze podcasting, video voiceovers, integrative marketing using social media, and evaluation of internet outreach. This presentation is based on lessons learned from Food Safety in a Minute (161 episodes) and Food Safety and Covid-19 podcasts/videos (36) in English and Spanish/SNAP-Ed.
Other learning objects
Food Safety in a Minute Podcast Index, 2019-2022
Availability date 05/2022
Report
Pack food safety in your lunch
Published 04/2018
Packed lunches can be quick, healthy, and easy on the family budget. Whether you’re in school, work in an office building, or you’re going on vacation, make certain to pack food safety along with your lunch. Understanding and applying food safety recommendations for packed lunches will keep you and your family healthy.
Journal article
The role of fruit bats in the transmission of pathogenic leptospires in Australia
Published 01/01/2011
Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology, 105, 1, 71 - 84
Although antileptospiral antibodies and leptospiral DNA have been detected in Australian fruit bats, the role of such bats as infectious hosts for the leptospires found in rodents and humans remains unconfirmed. A cohort-design, replicated survey was recently conducted in Far North Queensland, Australia, to determine if the abundance and leptospiral status of rodents were affected by association with colonies of fruit bats (Pteropus conspicillatus spp.) via rodent contact with potentially infectious fruit-bat urine. In each of four study areas, a 'colony site' that included a fruit-bat colony and the land within 1500 m of the colony was compared with a 'control site' that held no fruit-bat colonies and was >2000 m from the nearest edge of the colony site. Rodents were surveyed, for a total of 2400 trap-nights, over six sampling sessions between September 2007 and September 2008. A low abundance of rodents but a high carriage of leptospires in the rodents present were found to be associated with proximity to a fruit-bat colony. For example, means of 0·4 and 2·3 fawn-footed melomys (Melomys cervinipes) were collected/100 trap-nights at sites with and without fruit-bat colonies, respectively (P<0·001), but the corresponding prevalences of leptospiral carriage were 100% and 3·6% (P<0·001). Such trends were consistent across all of the sampling sessions but not across all of the sampling sites. Leptospires were not isolated from fruit bats by culture, and the role of such bats in the transmission of leptospires to rodents cannot be confirmed. The data collected do, however, indicate the existence of a potential pathway for transmission of leptospires from fruit bats to rodents, via rodent contact with infectious fruit-bat urine. Fruit bats may possibly be involved in the ecology of leptospires (including emergent serovars), as disseminators of pathogens to rodent populations. Stringent quantitative risk analysis of the present and similar data, to explore their implications in terms of disease prevalence and wildlife population dynamics, is recommended.
Report
Published 06/2001
The purpose of this 4-page color publication is to describe important food safety considerations and guidelines, agencies that regulate small, value-added food processors and community resources that are available to you in Washington State. 4 pages.