Investigating the effectiveness of washing cantaloupe melon rind in preventing the transference of surface E. coli into melon flesh

Authors

  • Adam Chan Author
  • BCIT School of Health Sciences, Environmental Health Institution
  • Helen Heacock Supervisor

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47339/ephj.2014.154

Keywords:

Cantaloupe, melon, rind, flesh, outbreak, Escherichia coli, foodborne illness

Abstract

 

Cantaloupe melon was the source of a lethal outbreak of Listeria in 2011. This research investigated whether washing a contaminated cantaloupe rind was sufficient in preventing the transferring of Escherichia coli. Hence, the null hypothesis for this study was that there is no association between washing a contaminated cantaloupe melon and the presence of the contamination in the flesh. In this study, 10 cantaloupes were used to produce a sample size of 20 per washed and unwashed treatments. Each of the samples was transferred to EC broth to determine the presence and absence of Escherichia coli (E. coli), the indicator organism that acted as the “outbreak contaminant.” The results showed 100% of the unwashed melons and 80% of the washed melons to have E. coli transferred into the flesh. A Chi Square analysis produced a p-value of 0.035. The study determined that there was a statistically significant association between washing a melon and the presence of E. coli in the melon flesh. The author recommends washing melon rind as a means to prevent foodborne illness caused by surface contaminants.

 

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Published

2014-05-07

How to Cite

Chan, A., BCIT School of Health Sciences, Environmental Health, & Heacock, H. (2014). Investigating the effectiveness of washing cantaloupe melon rind in preventing the transference of surface E. coli into melon flesh. BCIT Environmental Public Health Journal. https://doi.org/10.47339/ephj.2014.154

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