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Escherichia coli O157: comparing awareness of rural residents and visitors in livestock farming areas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 January 2011

C. D. R. JONES*
Affiliation:
Geography & Environment, School of Geosciences, University of Aberdeen, St Mary's, Aberdeen, UK
C. HUNTER
Affiliation:
Geography & Environment, School of Geosciences, University of Aberdeen, St Mary's, Aberdeen, UK
A. P. WILLIAMS
Affiliation:
School of the Environment, Natural Resources & Geography, College of Natural Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, Gwynedd, UK
N. J. C. STRACHAN
Affiliation:
Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, Cruickshank Building, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK
P. CROSS
Affiliation:
School of the Environment, Natural Resources & Geography, College of Natural Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, Gwynedd, UK
*
*Author for correspondence: Dr C. D. R. Jones, Geography & Environment, School of Geosciences, University of Aberdeen, St Mary's, Elphinstone Road, Aberdeen AB24 3UF, Scotland, UK. (Email: c.d.jones@abdn.ac.uk)
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Summary

This research compared public opinions about Escherichia coli O157 (an increasing environmental hazard associated with livestock) in two farming areas with contrasting incidence of E. coli O157 disease. A questionnaire was administered in rural Grampian (10·8 cases/100 000 population per year) and North Wales (2·5 cases/100 000 population per year). Awareness was highest among farmers in Grampian (91%) and lowest among visitors to both areas (28%). Respondents were more likely to indicate vomiting (76%) than bloody diarrhoea (48%) as a common symptom. Undercooked meat and contact with farm animal faeces were identified by 60% of all respondents as risk factors who described ‘basic hygiene’ for risk reduction indoors. Visitors view E. coli O157 as a food hazard, not an environmental hazard that produces vomiting not dysentery. Efforts to reduce human infections in livestock farming areas could be improved with proximate reminders for visitors of the environmental pathway of E. coli O157 infection.

Information

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011
Figure 0

Table 1. Awareness of E. coli O157 by respondent groups: comparison of (a) the groupings formed for comparing visitors' and residents' understandings of E. coli O157 symptoms and sources of infection with (b) the initial groups used for preliminary analysis of awareness

Figure 1

Table 2. Logistic regression of factors associated with respondents who had ‘not heard of E. coli O157’

Figure 2

Table 3. Comparison between Grampian farmers and all other respondents' views on the seriousness of their illness if infected with E. coli O157

Figure 3

Fig. 1. Respondents' views on the symptoms associated with E. coli O157 infection: comparing the views of all respondents; farmers in Grampian; and visitors to the countryside from outside the study areas.

Figure 4

Table 4. Comparison of farmers, visitors and residents symptom scores discriminating for symptom precision of E. coli O157 infection

Figure 5

Fig. 2. Comparison of the views of farmers, rural residents (non-farming) and visitors to the countryside on the likelihood of ‘people in general get[ting] E. coli O157’ from different sources; scored as: 1, ‘very unlikely’; 2, ‘unlikely’; 3, ‘a slight chance’; 4, ‘likely’; and 5, ‘very likely’.