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Release Date: July 14, 2000
Contact: R. E. Gilbert
+44 (0)20 7905 2606
Undercooked Meat is Chief Cause of Parasite Infection in Pregnancy
Eating undercooked, raw or cured meat during pregnancy is the main risk factor for the
common parasite infection -- toxoplasmosis -- which can lead to brain damage in the unborn
child, according to a study in this week's British Medical Journal.
Researchers interviewed over 1,000 pregnant women, both with and without toxoplasma
infection, across six European cities about their occupations, lifestyle and eating
habits. Their knowledge about sources of infection was also assessed. The authors found
that eating raw, undercooked or cured meat contributed to between 30 percent and 63
percent of infections. Contact with soil contributed to up to 17 percent of infections and
travel outside Europe or the United States and Canada was also a significant risk factor.
Weaker associations were also seen in women who reported tasting raw meat during
preparation of meals, drinking unpasteurised milk and working with animals. Contact with
cats was not a risk factor for infection.
Interestingly, say the authors, women listed contact with cats, eating raw meat and
eating raw or unwashed fruit or vegetables as the main sources of infection. Few women
mentioned contact with soil. Despite some limitations of the study, the need for
preventative strategies is clear, conclude the authors. They call for improved quality and
consistency of information available to pregnant women, better labelling of meat according
to farming and processing methods and improved farm hygiene to reduce infection in
animals.
In an accompanying commentary, Richard Holliman of St George's Hospital and
Medical School in London reinforces the need for preventative strategies "to reduce
the infectivity of meat products." He believes that "current health education
may benefit from focus and refinement, concentrating on the principal risk factors at the
expense of less important issues" and concludes "the health implications of
consuming raw, undercooked or cured meats in pregnancy require careful
consideration."
Contacts: [Paper] R. E. Gilbert, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Epidemiology, Department
of Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 1EH
Tel: +44 (0)20 7905 2606 or +44 (0)20 7242 9789 ext. 2101 Fax: +44 (0)20 7813 8233 or +44
(0)20 7242 2723 e-mail: r.gilbert@ich.ucl.ac.uk.
[Commentary] Richard Holliman, Consultant and Reader in Clinical Microbiology, St
George's Hospital and Medical School, London SW17 0QT Tel: +44 (0)20 8725 5673 e-mail:
rhollima@sghms.ac.uk.
(Sources of toxoplasma infection in pregnant women: European multicentre case-control
study) British Medical Journal, Volume 321, pp 142-147.
(Commentary: congenital toxoplasmosis -- further thought for food) British Medical
Journal, Volume 321, p 147.
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