METHODOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE PROJECT “EVALUATION OF MICROBIOLOGICAL STATE IN SCHOOL PREMISES”

2006 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-42
Author(s):  
Daiva Paškevičienė ◽  
Algimantas Paškevičius

The article presents methodological recommendations for the implementation of the project of a microbiological nature. The urgency of the project is undoubted, as it has been noticed that school classes were overcrowded with pupils and almost not ventilated in winter, thus, schoolchildren often suffered from respiratory illnesses. Besides, secondary school programs include many themes in which the concept of microorganisms is used, however, pupils usually lack practical knowledge about isolation of microorganisms in a laboratory and their distribution in the air. The main aim of this work was to evaluate microbial contamination of school premises as well as to provide pupils with knowledge about biological peculiarities of various systematic groups (bacteria, micromycetes and yeast-like fungi) and their macro- and micro-morphological peculiarities. To achieve the aim, the following tasks were set: 1) to develop pupils’ abilities to make experiments and develop their initial skills in research; 2) to form their cognitive experience of the surrounding world while performing team tasks; 3) to develop pupils’ creative-organizational abilities as an integral process of theoretical and practical actions. Due to lack of equipment and conditions, it is not easy to perform microbiological projects in schools. Furthermore, a teacher should have competence, though due to this, in the article much attention is paid to the methods of project performance. Necessary labware and nutritive media for project implementation are indicated. Possible variants of an experiment scheme are discussed and the stages of the experiment are presented coherently. Preparation of microscopical mounts and microscopy methods are described in detail. It is pointed out that the identification of microorganisms is a very hard work, so teachers should be trained in microbiological methods. Handbooks, which can be used for the identification of some microorganisms, are indicated. Much attention is paid to the presentation of experiment results, as pupils participating in the project get much information about microorganisms. Participants get familiarized with the size and shape of bacterial cells and fungal macro-morphological (colony colour, shape, size and colour of colony reverse) and micro-morphological (a shape of conidia and mycelium) peculiarities. Pupils observe reproduction ways of yeast-like fungi (budding and binary fission) and determine yeast cell shape, size and other characteristic properties. While describing microorganisms isolated from school indoor air, pupils indicate a systematic group to which a microorganism (a bacterium, micromycete and yeast-like fungus) belongs. When the opportunities to identify microorganisms exist, pupils point out a genus and a species to which a microorganism is ascribed. Possible variants of systematizing the obtained results (tables and pictures, etc.) are discussed. The implementation of the project in schools has undoubted theoretic and practical significance, because pursuing the project the pupil’s abilities to make an experiment are developed and initial skills in research and cognitive experience of the surrounding invisible world are formed. Execution of the project induces pupils’ creative-organizational abilities as an integral process of theoretical and practical actions. Later the pupils willingly participate in competitions and conferences of young researchers – naturalists, write papers, prepare a wall newspaper about microbial contamination of school indoor air and give recommendations about improvement of school sanitation. While performing team tasks, participants get knowledge about microorganisms of various systematic groups (bacteria, micromycetes and yeast-like fungi), their isolation under laboratory conditions and distribution in the indoor air. Pupils can use obtained knowledge in the lessons of the course “A Man and his Health” (9th grade) as well as in ecology and general biology (11th – 12th grades) lessons. Key words: microorganisms, distribution, air of school premises.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliet Kyayesimira ◽  
Wangalwa Rapheal ◽  
Grace Kagoro Rugunda ◽  
Lejju Julius Bunny ◽  
Morgan Andama ◽  
...  

Abstract Background If hygiene practices along the beef processing nodes at small and medium enterprise (SME) slaughter houses and butcheries are not observed, they may pose a health risk due to microbial contamination. In SME slaughterhouses and butcheries, the risk may be higher due to transmission of foodborne pathogens. This study determined the hygienic practices and microbial quality risk among meat handlers (MH) in SME slaughterhouses and butcheries. Methods Assessment of microbiological quality of beef was carried out at slaughter houses and butcher shops in the districts of Western, Central and Eastern regions of Uganda. A cross sectional study was conducted from June 2017 to January 2018 using observation checklists to record unhygienic practices among the various actors. Microbial load at slaughter and butchery was determined from a total of 317 swab samples collected from carcass, tools, protective clothing and hands of meat handlers. The microbiological quality of beef was evaluated using standard microbiological methods. The samples were inoculated into differential and selective media. Results Butcheries had the highest microbial load on beef carcass ranging from 4.76 log 10 cfu/cm 2 to 7.90 log 10 cfu/cm 2 Total Viable Counts (TVC) while Total Coliform Counts (TCC) ranged from 1.42 log 10 cfu/cm 2 to 3.05 log 10 cfu/cm 2 , E. coli ranged from 0.68 log 10 cfu/cm 2 to 1.06 log 10 cfu/cm 2 and Staphylococcus aureus ranged from 3.25 log 10 cfu/cm 2 to 4.84 log 10 cfu/cm 2 . Salmonella was absent in all the samples analysed. Results of overall microbial quality of beef in Uganda indicated that only TCC (1.60±0.26 log 10 cfu/cm 2 ) of the beef carcass samples at slaughter houses was not significantly above the safe level (p = 0.693). Overall microbial load (TVC, TCC, E. coli and S. aureus ) at butcheries were significantly (p < 0.05) above the safe level. Butcheries of Mbale district had the highest percentage (70%) of beef carcass samples above the TCC safe levels whereas butcheries of Mbarara district had the highest percentage (40%) of beef carcass samples above the E. coli safe levels. TVC from hands and clothes at butchery across the three study districts varied significantly (p=0.007) with the highest counts (7.23 log 10 cfu/cm 2 ) recorded from personnel clothes and lowest (5.46 log 10 cfu/cm 2 ) recorded from hands. On the other hand, swab samples picked from chopping board and working table at the butchery did not show significant variation in TVC, TCC, E. coli and S. aureus microbial loads across the three study districts. Conclusion Hygienic handling of carcasses after slaughter is critical in preventing contamination and ensuring meat safety in informal meat trading sectors in Uganda. Handling practices of beef at Ugandan slaughterhouses and butcheries are not hygienic hence not up to standard and they contribute to microbial contamination of beef posing a risk to consumers. The distribution stage is the most critical period, during which the quality of meat can easily be compromised.


Author(s):  
Lisa Were ◽  
Gertrude Were ◽  
Kevin Omondi Aduol

Street-vended foods are a major threat to public health because of their microbial contamination. This study investigated hygiene practices and microbial contamination of street foods in Kenyatta University’s environs. Both cross-sectional and experimental designs were adopted. Four (4) major vending stalls at the main entrance to Kenyatta University, gate (A) and at the hind gate at KM shopping center were identified for this study. Twelve (12) food samples were collected from these stalls; sausages, samosas and kachumbari. The foods were collected and transported in cooler boxes to the Microbiology Laboratory at Kenyatta University within 3 hours for analyses. Standard microbiological methods were used for enumeration of Salmonella, coliforms and Escherichia coli. No Salmonella was detected per 25g in all food samples tested. Fifty percent (50%) of kachumbari samples tested positive for E.coli whereas samosas and sausages tested negative. Kachumbari, from all vending stalls, had total coliform levels 4.12 log10 cfu/g, 4.26 log10 cfu/g and 4.21 log10 cfu/g, that did not meet the quality standards (4.00 log10 cfu/g) for ready-to-eat foods. Total coliform counts were below detection limits in samosas and sausages. All (100%) the stalls were exposed to potential contaminants: 75% of the vendors did not wear protective clothing, they handled money and sold food simultaneously, and polythene bags exposed to open air, were used for packaging take away rations. All the foods evaluated were safe for human consumption except kachumbari. Policies on safe street food to be enforced and education and training of vendors on environmental and personal hygiene to be strengthened.


2014 ◽  
Vol 620 ◽  
pp. 341-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun Shen ◽  
Jian Bo Cao ◽  
Xiu Hui Zhu ◽  
Xiao Jie Lei ◽  
Qiu Ling Ye ◽  
...  

Current domestic and international for the experimental apparatus been associated asynchronous motor design generally used hand horseshoe magnet rotates to drive the rotor rotates, While it is possible to achieve, the apparatus is too simple, and the effect is not in great satisfaction. To further improve the experimental results, a new type of asynchronous motor experimental device is designed, whose working mechanism is a DC motor as a driving source, driven by a reduction gear mechanism to produce a rotating magnetic field, the control circuit can be achieved by utilizing the rotational speed and adjust direction. By apparatus of the stator, rotor apparatus, the related motor control and display device design can make the operation more stable, more easily observed. The experimental apparatus can enhance students' awareness and understanding of asynchronous motor, so that the original abstract theory becomes boring incomprehensible gusto, to stimulate students' desire for knowledge, strengthen students' practical knowledge and ability, with higher practical significance. The apparatus simple shaped, with simple and safe operation, is able to facilitate teaching, with better promote the use of value.


Author(s):  
Marie-Louise Frank ◽  
Ernst Becker ◽  
Julia Schultz ◽  
Ulrike Hähner ◽  
Irene Brückle ◽  
...  

AbstractThis article discusses the use of electrostatic cleaning technology to remove loose particulate surface contamination - which here includes microbial contaminants such as spores, conidia and hyphal fragments - from two 19th century albumen photographs mounted on cardboard. The results of this study, obtained using light microscopy, SEM/EDX and microbiological methods, as well as conservators' visual evaluation, show that the technology is fundamentally suitable for removing microbial contamination from photographic prints and their cardboard mounts. Cleaning the surface four times with electrostatically charged foils reduced the microbial contamination by up to 70%. The surface of the albumen print, which is sensitive to abrasion, was not harmed, and its characteristic features were not changed. The photographs, which were partly delaminated from the cardboard support and the mechanically weakened cardboard, could be treated without creating any additional damage.


1996 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 809-812 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Feng

Abstract Because of the complexities of food analysis, conventional microbiological methods must use timeconsuming enrichment steps for culturing viable bacterial cells in foods. With rapid advancements in technology, however, numerous so-called rapid methods were introduced into the field of food microbiology in a relatively short time. Culture methods that were once used to obtain profiles for bacterial identification were simplified or automated. Many microbiological procedures were also streamlined or automated to reduce assay time, labor, and materials. Nucleic acid-based assays are used to identify gene sequences in foodborne bacteria, and antibody-based assays are used in numerous formats to detect bacterial pathogens and toxins in foods. The difficulties of analyzing food, however, remain challenging, and rapid methods need to be evaluated thoroughly before they are used for routine food analysis.


Atmosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 472
Author(s):  
Marlene Pacharra ◽  
Stefan Kleinbeck ◽  
Michael Schäper ◽  
Christine I. Hucke ◽  
Christoph van Thriel

Threshold assessments for the reference odorant n-butanol are an integral part of various research, clinical, and environmental sensory testing procedures. However, the practical significance of a high or low threshold for n-butanol beyond a particular testing environment and procedure are often unclear. Therefore, this study aimed to determine between-method correlations and to investigate the association between the n-butanol threshold and perceptual/behavioral odor effects in natural breathing scenarios in 35 healthy adults. The thresholds for n-butanol derived from the Sniffin’ Sticks test and determined by the ascending limit dynamic dilution olfactometry procedure were significantly correlated (∣r∣ = 0.47). However, only the thresholds determined by olfactometry were significantly correlated to the odor detection of n-butanol in an exposure lab. Moreover, participants with a higher sensitivity for n-butanol in the olfactometer-based assessment rated ammonia, during a 75 min exposure, to be more unpleasant and showed better performance in a simultaneous 3-back task than participants with lower sensitivity. The results of this study suggest that beyond the strict parameters of a certain psychophysical procedure, the threshold for n-butanol can be a meaningful indicator of odor detection and effects in some cases.


2021 ◽  
pp. 75-84
Author(s):  
В. Д. Білий

Purpose: to analyze the value of theoretical and practical knowledge and skills obtained in the study of Academic Drawing by students of the Decorative and Appling Art`s Department of the Kosiv Institute of Applying and Decorative Art LNAA. Methodology. Analytical and comprehensive approaches to the subject of research, structural analysis, observation and modeling methods, as well as comparative analysis were used, which made it possible to identify the features of drawing techniques` using in the realization of decorative and applied art projects. Results. The importance of the Drawing in the process of creating and making of decorative and applied art`s projects has been determined. It was revealed that for the realization, analysis of the form, its design (architectonics) and material is of particular importance, while the graphic means characteristic of a drawing is most often used to apply an ornament to the surface of the item. It is also important to sketching, aimed at theoretical comprehension of existing forms; search for new forms and designs in accordance with the previous idea. Special attention to the importance of the drawing in the education of students' aesthetic ideas and the creation of artistic and expressive works of art is paid. Scientific novelty of the paper lies in identifying the theoretical and practical skills and abilities that students of decorative and applied art`s specialties receive in the study of Academic Drawing and how they use them in the creating projects and art works based on the Kosiv Institute of Applying and Decorative Art LNAA. Practical significance. The obtained results into account in the process of teaching special disciplines can be taken, developing guidelines for them, in further scientific research.


2008 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 639-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
ILENYS M. PÉREZ-DÍAZ ◽  
VAN-DEN TRUONG ◽  
ASHLEE WEBBER ◽  
ROGER F. MCFEETERS

Refrigerated sweet potato puree is a convenient form of sweet potato that can be used as an ingredient in formulated foods. The microbiology of refrigerated sweet potato puree during storage for up to 5 weeks was evaluated. Because the puree was made by comminuting steam-cooked sweet potatoes before refrigeration, no naturally occurring vegetative bacterial cells were detected during a 4-week period of refrigerated storage at 4°C. However, if postprocessing microbial contamination of the puree were to occur, contaminating microorganisms such as Listeria monocytogenes could grow during refrigerated storage. The effects of acidification or the addition of potassium sorbate and sodium benzoate on a population of L. monocytogenes inoculated into refrigerated (4°C) sweet potato puree were determined. Inoculation of the refrigerated puree with L. monocytogenes at 106 CFU/ml resulted in a 3-log increase after 3 weeks storage of nonsupplemented puree. Supplementation of the sweet potato puree with 0.06% (wt/vol) sorbic acid or benzoic acid plus mild acidification of the sweet potato puree with citric acid to pH 4.2 prevented growth of L. monocytogenes during storage at 4°C.


Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 378
Author(s):  
Carla Viegas ◽  
Marta Dias ◽  
Beatriz Almeida ◽  
Estela Vicente ◽  
Carla Candeias ◽  
...  

Sampling campaigns indoors have shown that occupants exposed to contaminated air generally exhibit diverse health outcomes. This study intends to assess the deposition rates of total settleable dust and bioburden in the indoor air of dwellings onto quartz fiber filters and electrostatic dust collectors (EDCs), respectively. EDC extracts were inoculated onto malt extract agar (MEA) and dichloran glycerol (DG18) agar-based media used for fungal contamination characterization, while tryptic soy agar (TSA) was applied for total bacteria assessment, and violet red bile agar (VRBA) for Gram-negative bacteria. Azole-resistance screening and molecular detection by qPCR was also performed. Dust loading rates ranged from 0.111 to 3.52, averaging 0.675 μg cm−2 day−1. Bacterial counts ranged from undetectable to 16.3 colony-forming units (CFU) m−2 day−1 and to 2.95 CFU m−2 day−1 in TSA and VRBA, respectively. Fungal contamination ranged from 1.97 to 35.4 CFU m−2 day−1 in MEA, and from undetectable to 48.8 CFU m−2 day−1 in DG18. Penicillium sp. presented the highest prevalence in MEA media (36.2%) and Cladosporium sp. in DG18 (39.2%). It was possible to observe: (a) settleable dust loadings and fungal contamination higher in dwellings with pets; (b) fungal species considered indicators of harmful fungal contamination; (c) Aspergillus section Candidi identified in supplemented media with voriconazole and posaconazole; (d) specific housing typologies and (e) specific housing characteristics influencing the microbial contamination.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (06) ◽  
pp. 16669-16688
Author(s):  
Nii Korley Kortei ◽  
◽  
T Annan ◽  
L Quansah ◽  
G Aboagye ◽  
...  

One serious threat to public health in both developed and developing countries is the microbial contamination of food. This problem poses a great challenge and consequently has economic implications. Causes of microbial contamination are diverse and these may be natural, environmental, or technological. The microbiological quality of most ready-to-eat foods is of great significance to human health because they require minimal or no processing when consumed.The aim of this research was to investigate the microbiological quality of some ready-to-eat mixed vegetable salad foods, ingredients as well as the wash water samples of an urban restaurant located in Accra, Ghana. A total of thirty (30) samples categorized into mixed vegetable salads, foods and water obtained from an urban restaurant in the national capital of Ghana, Accra. They were analyzed at the microbiology laboratory and food microbiology laboratories of School of Allied Health Sciences(UHAS)and Council for Scientific and Industrial Research-Food Research Institute (CSIR-FRI), Ghana,respectively. Standard microbiological methods that are per International Organization for Standardization(ISO) Methods and Nordic Committee on Food Analysis Methods (NMKL) were used in determining the presence and levels of bacteria and fungi.Data obtained were transformed from standard to logarithmic forms and reported as mean+standard deviations. The aerobic plate count samples ranged from 0-4.73 log 10CFU/g. E-coli counts also ranged between 0-2.53 log 10CFU, while Bacillus cereus counts were very low at0-<10log 10CFU/g. Clostridium perfringens and Staphylococcus aureus counts were also very low ranging from0-1.0log10CFU/g.Enterobacteriaceae counts also ranged from 0-1.90 log10CFU/g. Molds and yeasts counts were generally low and ranged from 0-2.48 log 10CFU/g and 0-1.0 log10CFU/g,respectively. None of the samples tested contained Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella spp. Fungal microbial loads were minimal given the quantities, and were deleterious to the health of consumers. The study revealed that the bacterial loads on mixed vegetable salads, ingredients and water samples used and served by an urban restaurant in Accra were within safe limits according to American Public Health Association (APHA) and International Commission for Microbiological Specifications for Foods (ICMSF) guidelines and,therefore,good for human consumption.


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