10 ways food can be contaminated

Food becomes contaminated through a variety of mechanisms. Some things that can contribute to foodborne illness are:

  • inadequate handwashing
  • cross-contamination
  • storage and cooking temperatures
  • contamination of food by animal waste

Hand Washing

  • Pathogens can be introduced into food from infected humans who handle the food without thoroughly washing their hands.
  • These pathogens are thus transferred from trace amounts of fecal matter present on hands to the food.
  • Hand Hygiene: Wash Your Hands!
    Handwashing and Hand Hygiene information

Cross-Contamination

  • Food and kitchen tools and surfaces may become contaminated from raw food products (i.e., meat and poultry).
  • Microbes can be transferred from one food to another by using the same knife, cutting board or other utensil without washing the surface or utensil in between uses.
  • A food that is fully cooked can become re-contaminated if it touches other raw foods or drippings from raw foods that contain pathogens.
  • Prevent Cross-Contamination
    Cross-contamination is the physical movement or transfer of harmful bacteria from one person, object or place to another.

Storage and Cooking Temperatures

  • Many pathogens need to multiply to a larger number before enough are present in food to cause disease.
  • In general, refrigeration or freezing prevents virtually all bacteria from growing.
  • If food is heated sufficiently, parasites, viruses and most bacteria are killed.
  • How Temperatures Affect Food
    Food Safety and Inspection Service United States Department of Agriculture. Attention: Non-MDH link

Contamination of Food by Animal Waste

Many foodborne microbes are present in healthy animals raised for food.

  • Meat and poultry may become contaminated during slaughter by small amounts of intestinal contents.
  • Fresh fruits and vegetables can be contaminated if they are washed with water that is contaminated by animal manure or human sewage.

  • For Students
  • For Business
  • For Members

10 ways food can be contaminated

For Students

Taking an AIFS course? If you are enrolled in a course, log in here to:

  • start the course or continue your progress
  • complete your final submission
  • check your assessment status

Student Login

10 ways food can be contaminated

For Business

If you have a Business Account with us, log in here to:

  • enrol your staff in a food safety course
  • access reports and invoices
  • view your order history

Business Login

10 ways food can be contaminated

For Members

Members get unlimited access to our Resource Library. Log in here to:

  • access 'how-to' guides and videos
  • download custom forms, fact sheets and checklists
  • search our food recall feed

Member Login

For Business

If you have a Business Account with us, log in here to:

  • enrol your staff in a food safety course
  • access reports and invoices
  • view your order history

Business Login

For Members

Members get unlimited access to our Resource Library. Log in here to:

  • access 'how-to' guides and videos
  • download custom forms, fact sheets and checklists
  • search our food recall feed

Member Login

10 ways food can be contaminated

More than 200 diseases, from diarrhea to cancer, are associated with food contamination. Bacteria, viruses, parasites, and chemical substances can all be introduced into the body via contaminated food, the result of which being a huge burden to public health.

10 ways food can be contaminated

Contaminated Food. Image Credit: Giovanni Cancemi/Shutterstock.com

With around 1 in 10 people around the world falling ill each year from consuming contaminated food, and roughly 420,000 million of these cases ending in death, the issue of food safety has become a public health priority.

Here, we discuss the nature of food contamination, the various bacteria, viruses, parasites, and chemical substances that contaminate food, and the four main routes contributing to food contamination. Finally, we discuss what is being done to prevent food contamination to protect human health.

The nature of food contamination and its impact on health

Food can become contaminated with a variety of bacteria, viruses, parasites, and chemicals, the effects of which can range from mild food poisoning to disease and death.

Campylobacter, Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli and salmonella are some of the most common types of foodborne pathogens that contaminate food. Millions of people come into contact with these pathogens each year, the outcome of which can be fatal. In addition, listeria contamination, another common pathogen, can cause miscarriage and death in newborns. In terms of viruses, norovirus and hepatitis A can be transmitted via food, with serious health consequences.

Parasites can also contaminate food and lead to illness. Fish-borne trematodes, tapeworms such as Echinococcus spp, or Taenia solium, and other parasites such as Ascaris, Cryptosporidium, Entamoeba histolytica, or Giardia, are among the most common. Additionally, prions, a class of infectious agents built of a protein, can also contaminate food, causing serious health problems to those consuming infected food. Bovine spongiform encephalopathy, known as BSE, or "mad cow disease is a prion disease that can be transmitted via contaminated meat, causing the variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (vCJD) in humans.

Finally, chemicals can also be unwillingly introduced to food products. Naturally occurring toxins such as mycotoxins, marine biotoxins, and cyanogenic glycosides can contaminate food, causing cancer and disrupting immune function. Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) which accumulate in the environment, such as dioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), can also cause cancer and damage to the immune system when ingested. Heavy metals are the final group of chemicals that commonly contaminate foods, such contamination can lead to neurological and kidney damage.

Main routes to contamination

There are four main routes to food contamination: cross-contamination, improper hand washing, inappropriate storage and temperatures, and contamination by animal waste.

10 ways food can be contaminated

Cross Contamination. Image Credit: kathrinerajalingam/Shutterstock.com

Cross-contamination is the transference of harmful bacteria from one source to another. In food, it occurs when food pathogens are transferred from one food item to another via shared surfaces, cooking utensils, or any items that come into contact with the infected food item and then another. The biggest threat is posed by raw food products which can carry pathogens that are destroyed when cooked but can spread to other items while they are raw. Using separate chopping boards and knives for preparing high-risk foods such as raw meat, as well as keeping cooked food away from raw food can prevent cross-contamination and re-contamination. Studies have also shown that keeping food preparation surfaces dry can prevent bacterial growth.

Improper handwashing can transfer pathogens to food from infected humans who handle the food. Commonly, food contaminated in this way is exposed to trace amounts of fecal matter on the hands which carry the harmful pathogens. Studies have shown that regular, thorough hand washing is an effective preventative method at reducing this kind of contamination route.

Inappropriate storage and maintaining and cooking food at incorrect temperatures is another key route to food contamination. Storing food at cold temperatures, via refrigeration or freezing, prevents almost all kinds of bacteria from growing. On the other hand, cooking food sufficiently is effective at killing off many bacteria, parasites, and viruses. Additionally, food that is not stored appropriately in terms of separating cooked from raw foods, particularly meat, and keeping raw meats at the bottom of the fridge to ensure drippings do not contact other food is vital for preventing this kind of food contamination.

Finally, food can also be contaminated by animal waste. A wide range of foodborne microbes exist in healthy animals that are raised as livestock. During the slaughter process, meat and poultry can become contaminated by very small amounts of contents that originate in the animals’ intestines. Another route to contamination of food with animal waste is improper washing of fresh fruits and vegetables. In some parts of the world, there is a greater risk that the water used to wash fresh produce may have been contaminated by animal manure or human sewage.

While there are numerous routes to food contamination, which can cause serious health implications and even death, scientists are continuing to study the nature of contamination and develop strategies to avoid it - strategies that are often simple and require only education about proper food preparation and cooking methods.

Sources:

  • Carrasco, E., Morales-Rueda, A. and García-Gimeno, R., 2012. Cross-contamination and recontamination by Salmonella in foods: A review. Food Research International, 45(2), pp.545-556. www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0963996911006260
  • Food safety. World Health Organization. Available at: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/food-safety
  • Green, L., Selman, C., Radke, V., Ripley, D., Mack, J., Reimann, D., Stigger, T., Motsinger, M. and Bushnell, L., 2006. Food Worker Hand Washing Practices: An Observation Study. Journal of Food Protection, 69(10), pp.2417-2423. meridian.allenpress.com/.../Food-Worker-Hand-Washing-Practices-An-Observation
  • Kusumaningrum, H., 2003. Survival of foodborne pathogens on stainless steel surfaces and cross-contamination to foods. International Journal of Food Microbiology, 85(3), pp.227-236. www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0168160502005408

Further Reading

  • All Food Science Content
  • Study establishes instrumental probes for quality control of French fries
  • Risk assessments of mushroom consumption should factor in cooking and digestion
  • Genetic variation in taste receptors could help inform food production
  • Protein and Bloating

What are the 10 food contamination sources?

Major contamination sources are water, air, dust, equipment, sewage, insects, rodents, and employees. Contamination of raw materials can also occur from the soil, sewage, live animals, external surface, and the internal organs of meat animals.

What are 5 ways food can be contaminated?

Main routes to contamination There are four main routes to food contamination: cross-contamination, improper hand washing, inappropriate storage and temperatures, and contamination by animal waste.

What are the 8 common causes of food contamination?

#1 Unwashed and dirty cooking utensils. ... .
#2 Mixing raw food with cooked food. ... .
#3 Thawing and storing food at unsafe temperatures (above 5°C) ... .
#4 Leftovers and expired food products. ... .
#5 Drinking from untreated bodies of water. ... .
#6 Unregulated food handling. ... .
#7 Eating raw or unsafe food. ... .
#8 Dirty ice cubes and tap water..

What are 3 ways food can be contaminated?

There are three types of food contamination: biological, chemical and physical contamination. Learn how they occur, and ways to prevent them.