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Title: Integrating food safety surveillance into early public health detection systems: A framework for preventing foodborne-related cancers
Authors: Stanley Chukwukelu, Ikechukwu Onwe, Chidinma I. Onyeibor, Chinyere E. Ekanem
Journal: International medical science research journal
Year: 2025
Volume: 5
Issue: 3
Language: en
Foodborne illnesses remain a persistent public health challenge in the United States and globally, with an estimated 600 million cases and over 400,000 deaths worldwide each year. While acute foodborne infections caused by pathogens such as Salmonella, Listeria monocytogenes, and E. coli have received substantial attention, there is increasing concern over the long-term health effects of chronic exposure to foodborne contaminants. Mounting evidence has linked substances such as aflatoxins, nitrites, nitrates, mycotoxins, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and heavy metals to various forms of cancer, including liver, stomach, colorectal, and esophageal cancers. These carcinogenic agents often enter the food supply chain through poor agricultural practices, inadequate food storage, or insufficient processing standards—especially in underserved communities and resource-limited regions. Current food safety surveillance systems are primarily designed to detect and respond to immediate outbreaks rather than long-term health outcomes. These systems typically operate in silos, disconnected from cancer registries, environmental health monitoring platforms, and early detection programs. This fragmentation creates missed opportunities for early intervention, risk mitigation, and informed policy development. This paper proposes a novel integrated surveillance framework that bridges food safety monitoring with public health data systems, enabling early identification and tracking of foodborne exposure-related cancer risks. Drawing on global best practices in food regulatory models and advances in public health informatics, we present a cross-sectoral approach involving real-time contaminant detection, data integration with electronic medical records (EMRs) and cancer registries, predictive analytics, and targeted screening for high-risk populations. The proposed system supports timely interventions, strengthens regulatory compliance, and contributes to the long-term goal of reducing the cancer burden linked to foodborne exposures. Implementation of this model will require inter-agency collaboration, modern technological infrastructure, clear data-sharing policies, and the development of a skilled workforce. Ultimately, this paper argues for a paradigm shift—one that unites food safety and chronic disease prevention in a coordinated strategy to safeguard population health and advance health equity.
Keywords: Food Safety Surveillance, Cancer Prevention, Public Health Integration, Risk Assessment, Regulatory Compliance.
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