The Cost of Foodborne Illness and Its Sequelae in Australia Circa 2019
Date
2023
Authors
Glass, Katie
McLure, Angus
Bourke, Siobhan
Cribb, Dani
Kirk, Martyn
March, Jason
Daughtry, Ben
Smiljanic, Snezana
Lancsar, Emily
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Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert Inc.
Abstract
Foodborne illnesses cause a significant health burden, with Campylobacter and norovirus the most common causes of illness and Salmonella a common cause of hospitalization and occasional cause of death. Estimating the cost of illness can assist in quantifying this health burden, with pathogen-specific costs informing prioritization of interventions. We used a simulation-based approach to cost foodborne disease in Australia, capturing the cost of premature mortality, direct costs of nonfatal illness (including health care costs, medications, and tests), indirect costs of illness due to lost productivity, and costs associated with pain and suffering. In Australia circa 2019, the cost in Australian Dollars (AUD) of foodborne illness and its sequelae was 2.44 billion (90% uncertainty interval 1.65–3.68) each year, with the highest pathogen-specific costs for Campylobacter, non-typhoidal Salmonella, non-Shiga toxin–producing pathogenic Escherichia coli, and norovirus. The highest cost per case was for Listeria monocytogenes (AUD 776,000). Lost productivity was the largest component cost for foodborne illness due to all causes and for most individual pathogens; the exceptions were pathogens causing more severe illness such as Salmonella and L. monocytogenes, where premature mortality was the largest component cost. Foodborne illness results in a substantial cost to Australia; interventions to improve food safety across industry, retail, and consumers are needed to maintain public health safety.
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Keywords
costing,, foodborne disease, cost of illness
Citation
Collections
Source
Foodborne Pathogens and Disease
Type
Journal article
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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