Attachment 3. Definition of Contributing Factors to Foodborne Illness Outbreaks
The following table contains guidance and definitions for factors that introduce or otherwise permit contamination, proliferation/amplification, and survival of pathogens into food. This is the newest contributing factor guidance (2022).
Contamination Factors
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C1 |
Toxin or chemical agent naturally part of tissue in food Description A natural toxin found in a plant, fungus, or animal; -OR- A chemical agent of biologic origin that occurs naturally in the plant, fungus, or animal or bioaccumulates in the plant, fungus, or animal before or soon after harvest or slaughter. Examples
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C2 |
Poisonous substance or infectious agent intentionally added to food to cause illness (does not include injury) Description A poisonous substance, chemical agent, or infectious agent was intentionally/deliberately added to the food in quantities sufficient to cause illness. Poisons added because of sabotage, mischievous acts, and attempts to cause panic or for blackmail fall into this category. This CF does not apply to physical objects (such as a sharp object) intentionally added to food to cause injury. Examples
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C3 |
Poisonous substance accidentally/inadvertently added to food Description A poisonous substance or chemical agent was accidentally or inadvertently added to the food. This addition typically occurs at the time of preparation or packaging of the food. Misreading labels, resulting in either mistaking poisonous substances for foods or incorporating them into food mixtures, would also fall into this category. Examples
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C4 |
Ingredients toxic in large amounts accidentally added to food Description An approved ingredient was accidentally added in excessive quantities to the food so as to make the food unacceptable for consumption. Examples
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C5 |
Container or equipment used to hold or convey food was made with toxic substances Description The container that held or conveyed the implicated food is made of toxic substances. The toxic substance either migrates into the food or leaches into the food through contact with highly acidic foods. Examples
Notable Exceptions This factor should not be confused with contamination resulting in a waterborne outbreak, rather than foodborne. Waterborne outbreaks generally include contamination occurring in the source water or in the treatment or distribution of water to the end consumer. For example, in drink mix/soda machines, if the water enters a contaminated machine or if there is a problem with the internal plumbing of the machine resulting in contamination (e.g., cross-connections, backflow of carbonated water resulting in copper leaching), this is a waterborne outbreak. For ice, if ice is made with contaminated water, it is also a waterborne outbreak. However, if ice is already made and then it becomes contaminated because it was previously stored in a container made with toxic substances, it is a foodborne outbreak and it would be appropriate to list C5 as a CF. For more examples and details differentiating between foodborne and waterborne outbreaks, please see NORS Appendix A. |
C6 |
Food contaminated by animal or environmental source at point of final preparation/sale Description The food was contaminated at point of final preparation/sale (e.g., restaurant, private home, etc.) by animal or environmental source(s), such as from dripping, flooding, airborne contamination, access of insects or rodents, and other situations conducive to contamination. Examples
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C7 |
Food contaminated by animal or environmental source before arriving at point of final preparation (pre or post-harvest) Description The food was contaminated before arriving at the point of final preparation by animal or environmental sources, either pre-harvest (e.g., growing field, harvest area, irrigation water, etc.) or post-harvest (e.g., processing or distribution facility, in warehouse storage, during transit, etc.).
Note: Traceback may implicate the identification of where the food was contaminated (pre-harvest versus post-harvest). If identified, please indicate this in the Point of Contamination question in the NORS interface; otherwise, please select “before point of final/preparation/sale: unknown”.
Examples Pre-Harvest:
Post-Harvest:
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C8 |
Cross-contamination of foods, excluding infectious food workers/handlers Description The pathogen was transferred to the food source from contaminated surfaces, foods, and/or fomites to include, but not limited to, food worker’s hands, cutting boards, preparation tables, utensils, processing lines, etc. Examples
Notable Exceptions This CF only applies to foods that are cross-contaminated by other food or fomites, and not by an infectious food worker/handler (please indicate C9 instead). |
C9 |
Contamination from infectious food worker/handler through bare hand contact with food Description A food worker/handler, who is suspected or confirmed to be infectious, used their bare hands to touch/prepare foods that are not subsequently cooked. If it is unknown whether the food worker was wearing gloves or not, then cite C11. If there is evidence for both bare hand contact and glove-hand contact with the food, both C9 and C10 should be cited.
This is a typical situation that precedes outbreaks caused by norovirus or staphylococcal enterotoxins.
Potential reasons to suspect or confirm that a food worker is “infectious” — an all-inclusive term used to describe all persons who are colonized by, infected with, a carrier of, or ill due to a pathogen:
Example
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C10 |
Contamination from infectious food worker/handler through glove-hand contact with food Description A food worker/handler, who is suspected or confirmed to be infectious, used their glove-hands to touch/prepare foods that were not subsequently cooked. If it is unknown whether the food worker was wearing gloves or not, then cite C11. If there is evidence for both bare hand contact and glove-hand contact with the food, both C9 and C10 should be cited.
This is a typical situation that precedes outbreaks caused by norovirus or staphylococcal enterotoxins.
See C9 for a further description of reasons to suspect or confirm an infectious food worker/handler. Example
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C11 |
Contamination from infectious food worker/handler through unknown type of hand contact with food or indirect contact with food Description A food worker/handler, who is suspected or confirmed to be infectious, used their hands to touch/prepare foods that were not subsequently cooked, but the epidemiologic/environmental investigation was unable to determine whether or not the food worker was wearing gloves during food preparation. -OR- A food worker/handler, who is suspected or confirmed to be infectious, contaminated the food indirectly (no direct bare-hand or glove-hand contact with the food).
This is a typical situation that precedes outbreaks caused by norovirus or staphylococcal enterotoxins.
See C9 for a further description of reasons to suspect an infectious food worker/handler. Examples
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C12 |
Contamination from infectious non-food worker/handler through direct or indirect contact with food Description A person other than a food handler/worker who is suspected or confirmed to be infectious, contaminated ready-to-eat foods that were later consumed by other persons, resulting in spread of the illness. A “non-food handler/worker” is considered to be any person who is not directly involved in the handling or preparation of the food before service.
Potential reasons to suspect or confirm that a non-food worker is “infectious” — an all-inclusive term used to describe all persons who are colonized by, infected with, a carrier of, or ill due to a pathogen:
Examples
Notable Exceptions This factor should not be confused with contamination from person-to-person, rather than foodborne. For person-to-person outbreaks, there would be no association with any particular food(s). |
C13 |
Other source of contamination (specify) Description A form of contamination that does not fit into the above categories. |
Proliferation/Amplification Factors
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P1 |
Allowing foods to remain out of temperature control for a prolonged period during preparation Description During food preparation, food was kept out of temperature control for a prolonged period that allowed pathogenic bacteria and/or fungi to multiply to an amount sufficient to cause illness or to produce toxins if toxigenic. Examples
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P2 |
Allowing foods to remain out of temperature control for a prolonged period during food service or display Description During food service or display, food was kept out of temperature control for a prolonged period that allowed pathogenic bacteria and/or fungi to multiply to an amount sufficient to cause illness or to produce toxins if toxigenic. Examples
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P3 |
Inadequate cold holding temperature due to malfunctioning refrigeration equipment Description Malfunctioning refrigeration equipment caused foods to be held at an inadequate cold holding temperature. Examples
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P4 |
Inadequate cold holding temperature due to an improper practice Description Inadequate cold holding temperature occurred due to an improper practice. Examples
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P5 |
Inadequate hot holding temperature due to malfunctioning equipment Description Malfunctioning hot-holding equipment caused foods to be held at an inadequate hot holding temperature. Examples
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P6 |
Inadequate hot holding temperature due to an improper practice Description Inadequate hot holding temperature occurred due to an improper practice. Examples
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P7 |
Improper cooling of food Description Foods were refrigerated in large quantities or stored in devices where the temperature was poorly controlled and allowed pathogens to multiply. Examples
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P8 |
Extended refrigeration of food for an unsafe amount of time, relative to the food product and pathogen Description This situation is a concern for psychrotrophic pathogenic bacteria (e.g., Listeria monocytogenes, Clostridium botulinum type E, Yersinia enterocolitica, Aeromonas hydrophila) that can multiply over sufficient time at ordinary refrigerator temperatures and grow to an amount sufficient to cause illness or produce toxins if toxigenic (e.g., C. botulinum). Examples
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P9 |
Inadequate Reduced Oxygen Packaging (ROP) of food Description Food was sealed using inadequate Reduced Oxygen Packaging (ROP) methods, which provided conditions conducive to growth of anaerobic or facultative bacteria in foods. ROP includes processing and packaging techniques that prevent the entry of oxygen into the container, such as vacuum packaging, modified or controlled atmosphere packaging, cook chill packaging, sous vide packaging, hermetically sealed containers (double seams/glass jar with lid), deep containers from which air is expressed, and products packed in oil. Examples
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P10 |
Inadequate non-temperature dependent processes (e.g., acidification, water activity, fermentation) applied to a food to prevent pathogens from multiplying Description Non-temperature-dependent processes (e.g., acidification, water activity, fermentation) failed and allowed pathogens to multiply to an amount sufficient to cause illness. This situation is a concern for growth of preformed heat-stable toxins or bacterial spores (e.g., Clostridium perfringens, Clostridium botulinum, Bacillus cereus, Staphylococcus aureus). Examples
Notable Exceptions Outbreaks caused by pathogenic bacteria, including E. coli, Listeria monocytogenes, and Salmonella species do not usually grow in high-acid food, but may be able to survive for extended periods of time. In these cases, please cite S4. |
P11 |
Other situations that promoted or allowed microbial growth or toxic production (specify) Description A factor that promoted growth, proliferation, amplification, or concentration of bacterial agents but that did not fit into any of the other defined categories. |
Survival Factors
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S1 |
Inadequate time and temperature control during initial cooking/thermal processing of food Description The time and temperature during initial cooking/thermal processing (e.g., pasteurizing, blanching, drying, dry roasting, frying, infrared, microwave, oil roasting, steaming) was inadequate to kill or reduce the pathogen population to below an infectious dose. In reference to cooking, but not retorting, it refers to the destruction of vegetative forms of bacteria, viruses, and parasites, but not bacterial spores. If the food under investigation was retorted, then spore-forming bacteria would be included. Examples
Notable Exceptions
Norovirus in food cannot be inactivated by moderate heat treatments, such as pasteurization. However, it can be effectively inactivated with cooking or other heat processes, such as roasting. |
S2 |
Inadequate time and temperature during reheating of food Description The time and temperature during reheating or heat processing of a previously cooked food (which may have been cooled overnight) was inadequate to kill or reduce the pathogen population to below an infectious dose. Examples
Notable Exceptions Citation of S2 does not include inactivation of preformed heat-stable toxins, such as Bacillus cereus. Please cite the appropriate proliferation factor instead. |
S3 |
Inadequate time and temperature control during freezing of food designed for pathogen destruction Description The time and temperature during freezing was inadequate to kill or reduce the pathogen population to below an infectious dose. A freezing process may be used in order to ensure the destruction of certain parasites before raw service of some foods, such as fish. Examples
Notable Exceptions
Norovirus in food cannot be inactivated by freezing. |
S4 |
Inadequate non-temperature dependent processes (e.g., acidification, water activity, fermentation) applied to a food to prevent pathogens from surviving Description Non-temperature depending processes (e.g., acidification, water activity, fermentation) designed to kill or reduce the pathogen population to below an infectious dose were inadequate or improperly used, allowing pathogens to survive. This situation is more of a concern for pathogenic bacteria with low infectious doses, making pathogen survival more often the cause for illness rather than pathogen proliferation.
Please note:
Examples
Notable Exceptions Norovirus in food cannot be inactivated by acidification. |
S5 |
No attempt was made to inactivate the contaminant through initial cooking/thermal processing, freezing, or chemical processes Description No attempt was made to inactivate the contaminant through initial cooking/thermal processing, freezing, or chemical processes. Examples
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S6 |
Other process failures that permit pathogen survival (specify)
Description A form of survival that does not fit into the above categories. |
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | CDC User |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2022-08-15 |