Event Addresses Foodborne Diseases and Continued Threats to Public Safety
The free, public presentation titled Pot Pies, Peppers and Peanut Butter: Foodborne Disease and the Continuing Challenges to Public Safety will take place Thursday, March 26, 2009, at 4 p.m. The event will be held in the University of Cincinnati (UC)
Robert Tauxe, MD, MPH, deputy director of the division of foodborne, bacterial and mycotic diseases at the National Center for Zoonotic, Vectorborne and Enteric Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention, will discuss this important public health problem and how the governmentand communityneed to prepare to respond.
The presentation is part of the Malcolm Adcock Memorial Lecture Series, a public health education series jointly sponsored by the Environmental Protection Agency's
According to the CDC, foodborne diseases cause an estimated 5,000 deaths and 76 million illnesses each year. The agency says large, multi-state foodborne outbreaks require multi-player coordination to detect, investigate and control disease.
A professional symposium discussing food, farms and illness featuring Malak Kotb, PhD, chair of UCs molecular genetics, biochemistry and microbiology department, will take place the same day from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Registration for the symposium is $25 and includes lunch.
For reservations or more information, contact Marianne Kautz at (800) 207-9399 or kautzm@uc.edu.
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