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Prevalence of zoonotic or potentially zoonotic bacteria, antimicrobial resistance, and somatic cell counts in organic dairy production: current knowledge and research gaps

Wilhelm, B and Rajic, A and Waddell, L and Parker, S and Harris, J and Roberts, K C and Kydd, R and Greig, J and Baynton, A

Foodborne Pathogens and Disease (2009) 6: 525–539

DOI: 10.1089/fpd.2008.0181

Abstract

The review’s objective was to identify, evaluate, and summarize the findings of all primary research published in English or French, investigating prevalence of zoonotic or potentially zoonotic bacteria, bacterial resistance to antimicrobials, and somatic cell count (SCC) in organic dairy production, or comparing organic and conventional dairy production, using a systematic review methodology. Among 47 studies included in the review, 32 comparison studies were suitable for quality assessment. Fifteen studies were not assessed for quality, due to their descriptive nature or a low sample size (n \textlessor= 2 farms). Overall, bacterial outcomes were reported in 17 studies, and prevalence of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and multidrug resistance (MDR) of zoonotic or potentially zoonotic bacteria in 12 and 7 studies, respectively. Campylobacter spp., Escherichia coli including Shiga toxin-producing strains, Salmonella spp., Staphylococcus aureus, and SCC were investigated in 2, 7, 4, 6, and 15 studies, respectively. Contradictory findings were reported for differences in bacterial outcomes and SCC between dairy production types (organic vs. conventional). Lower prevalence of AMR on organic dairy farms was reported more consistently in studies conducted in the United States, as opposed to those conducted in Europe. These conflicting findings may result from geographic differences in organic production regulations governing antimicrobial usage, use of antimicrobials in conventional dairy production, and baseline prevalence, as well as laboratory methods, study designs, or methods of analysis employed. The majority (four of seven) of MDR investigations reported no significant differences in prevalence. Overall, only 9 of 32 studies met all five methodological soundness criteria. More well designed, executed, and reported primary research is needed at the farm and post-farm levels.

Citation

Wilhelm, B., Rajic, A., Waddell, L., Parker, S., Harris, J., Roberts, K. C., Kydd, R., Greig, J., & Baynton, A. (2009). Prevalence of zoonotic or potentially zoonotic bacteria, antimicrobial resistance, and somatic cell counts in organic dairy production: current knowledge and research gaps. Foodborne Pathogens and Disease, 6(5), 525–539. https://doi.org/10.1089/fpd.2008.0181 Animals, Swine, Cattle, Poultry, Dairying/methods, Research, Bacterial, Colony Count, Microbial, Drug Resistance, Zoonoses/microbiology, Campylobacter/drug effects/isolation & purification, Health Food/microbiology, Dairy Products/microbiology, Escherichia coli/drug effects/isolation & purification, Salmonella/drug effects/isolation & purification, Staphylococcus aureus/drug effects/isolation & purification

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