An Analysis of Fifty-Year-Surveillance of Food Related Diseases in Turkey

Authors

  • Gulsun Akdemir Evrendilek
  • E. Yilmaz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14232/analecta.2017.1.1-8

Abstract

Occurrence rate and magnitude of food-related diseases (FRD) are of global concern causing socio-economic issues, and thus, they must be continuously monitored. The objectives of the study were to determine occurrence rate and trends of FRD in Turkey from 1960 to 2010 in parallel to increased rate of population growth. Recorded incidents of foodborne illnesses/diseases were obtained as annual reports and expressed as disease/population rate in order to determine trends of each disease. Long-term evaluations of bacillary dysentery (BD), brucellosis, gastrointestinal diarrhea (GD), meningitis infections, meningitis and central nervous system infections (MCNSI), other bacterial infections, other infections and parasite-caused diseases (OIPCD), other virus-caused infections, paratyphoid, and typhoid showed different trends in terms of occurrence rate but an overall decrease in the occurrence rates of BD, GD, OIPCD, and typhoid.

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Published

2017-01-03

How to Cite

Akdemir Evrendilek, G., & Yilmaz, E. (2017). An Analysis of Fifty-Year-Surveillance of Food Related Diseases in Turkey. Analecta Technica Szegedinensia, 11(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.14232/analecta.2017.1.1-8

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Section

Articles