Cargando…

Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania

Bacteria were quantified in samples of drinking-water and in two porridges prepared for infant-feeding [fortified instant soy-rice porridge (SRP) and cooked porridge (Lishe bora, LB)] in 54 households. Bacterial numbers were measured again after the porridges had been held at room temperature for fo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kung'u, Jacqueline K., Boor, Kathryn J., Ame, Shaali M., Ali, Nadra S., Jackson, Anna E., Stoltzfus, Rebecca J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2761806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19248647
_version_ 1782172855661756416
author Kung'u, Jacqueline K.
Boor, Kathryn J.
Ame, Shaali M.
Ali, Nadra S.
Jackson, Anna E.
Stoltzfus, Rebecca J.
author_facet Kung'u, Jacqueline K.
Boor, Kathryn J.
Ame, Shaali M.
Ali, Nadra S.
Jackson, Anna E.
Stoltzfus, Rebecca J.
author_sort Kung'u, Jacqueline K.
collection PubMed
description Bacteria were quantified in samples of drinking-water and in two porridges prepared for infant-feeding [fortified instant soy-rice porridge (SRP) and cooked porridge (Lishe bora, LB)] in 54 households. Bacterial numbers were measured again after the porridges had been held at room temperature for four hours (T4). Findings were benchmarked against bacterial numbers in traditional complementary foods sampled from 120 households. Total bacteria, coliform, and Enterobacteriaceae counts were enumerated using Petrifilm™. The mean log bacterial numbers were the lowest for LB at T0 (2.24±0.84 cfu/g aerobic counts) and the highest for SRP at T4 (4.63±0.56 cfu/g aerobic counts). The total bacteria, coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts were higher at T4 than at T0 for LB (p≤0.001); however, only the coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts were higher at T4 than at T0 for SRP (p<0.001). Drinking-water, SRP0, traditional foods, and SRP4 all had the mean aerobic counts higher than the acceptable cut-off but the total bacterial count in SRP0 was not significantly (p=0.543) different from drinking-water. However, coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts in SRP0 were higher than in drinking-water (p<0.001). Also, although the aerobic counts of SRP4 were not significantly (p>0.999) different from traditional foods, the coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts were significantly higher in SRP4 than in traditional foods (p<0.001). It is, therefore, recommended that food safety concerns be addressed when improving complementary foods.
format Text
id pubmed-2761806
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27618062010-10-18 Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania Kung'u, Jacqueline K. Boor, Kathryn J. Ame, Shaali M. Ali, Nadra S. Jackson, Anna E. Stoltzfus, Rebecca J. J Health Popul Nutr Original Papers Bacteria were quantified in samples of drinking-water and in two porridges prepared for infant-feeding [fortified instant soy-rice porridge (SRP) and cooked porridge (Lishe bora, LB)] in 54 households. Bacterial numbers were measured again after the porridges had been held at room temperature for four hours (T4). Findings were benchmarked against bacterial numbers in traditional complementary foods sampled from 120 households. Total bacteria, coliform, and Enterobacteriaceae counts were enumerated using Petrifilm™. The mean log bacterial numbers were the lowest for LB at T0 (2.24±0.84 cfu/g aerobic counts) and the highest for SRP at T4 (4.63±0.56 cfu/g aerobic counts). The total bacteria, coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts were higher at T4 than at T0 for LB (p≤0.001); however, only the coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts were higher at T4 than at T0 for SRP (p<0.001). Drinking-water, SRP0, traditional foods, and SRP4 all had the mean aerobic counts higher than the acceptable cut-off but the total bacterial count in SRP0 was not significantly (p=0.543) different from drinking-water. However, coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts in SRP0 were higher than in drinking-water (p<0.001). Also, although the aerobic counts of SRP4 were not significantly (p>0.999) different from traditional foods, the coliform and Enterobacteriaceae counts were significantly higher in SRP4 than in traditional foods (p<0.001). It is, therefore, recommended that food safety concerns be addressed when improving complementary foods. International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh 2009-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2761806/ /pubmed/19248647 Text en © INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR DIARRHOEAL DISEASE RESEARCH, BANGLADESH http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Papers
Kung'u, Jacqueline K.
Boor, Kathryn J.
Ame, Shaali M.
Ali, Nadra S.
Jackson, Anna E.
Stoltzfus, Rebecca J.
Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania
title Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania
title_full Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania
title_fullStr Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania
title_short Bacterial Populations in Complementary Foods and Drinking-water in Households with Children Aged 10-15 Months in Zanzibar, Tanzania
title_sort bacterial populations in complementary foods and drinking-water in households with children aged 10-15 months in zanzibar, tanzania
topic Original Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2761806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19248647
work_keys_str_mv AT kungujacquelinek bacterialpopulationsincomplementaryfoodsanddrinkingwaterinhouseholdswithchildrenaged1015monthsinzanzibartanzania
AT boorkathrynj bacterialpopulationsincomplementaryfoodsanddrinkingwaterinhouseholdswithchildrenaged1015monthsinzanzibartanzania
AT ameshaalim bacterialpopulationsincomplementaryfoodsanddrinkingwaterinhouseholdswithchildrenaged1015monthsinzanzibartanzania
AT alinadras bacterialpopulationsincomplementaryfoodsanddrinkingwaterinhouseholdswithchildrenaged1015monthsinzanzibartanzania
AT jacksonannae bacterialpopulationsincomplementaryfoodsanddrinkingwaterinhouseholdswithchildrenaged1015monthsinzanzibartanzania
AT stoltzfusrebeccaj bacterialpopulationsincomplementaryfoodsanddrinkingwaterinhouseholdswithchildrenaged1015monthsinzanzibartanzania