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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Epidemiol Infect. 2015 Jan 20;143(12):2473–2485. doi: 10.1017/S0950268814003847

Table 2.

Impact of SES on incidence of pathogen-specific foodborne illness.

Pathogen Ref. Author Study Design Study period Key findings Summary
Campylobacter (24) Nichols Ecological 1989–20111 Lower deprivation associated with higher incidence. High SES associated with greater incidence of campylobacteriosis in all seven studies.
(26) Simonsen Cohort 1993–2004 Greater income and education associated with higher incidence among adults.
(25) Green Ecological 1996–2004 Higher SES associated with higher incidence.
(23) Rind Ecological 1997–2005 Lower deprivation associated with higher incidence.
(28) Gillespie Cohort 2000–2003 People in semi-routine occupations had the highest incidence. Incidence marginally higher in white collar workers than blue collar workers.
(22) Spencer Ecological 2001–2007 In urban areas, lower deprivation associated with higher incidence.
(27) Pyra Ecological 2004–2007 Higher income, education rate, and home ownership rate associated with higher incidence.
E. coli (26) Simonsen Cohort 1993–2004 No association with income or education. Some markers of high SES associated with increased incidence of E. coli O157 infection in three of five studies.
(29) Chang Ecological 1995–2002 Higher poverty and higher education associated with increased incidence. No association with social service utilization.
(32) Jalava Ecological 1997–2006 Higher education associated with higher incidence. No association by social service utilization.
(30) Sakuma Ecological 1999–2004 Higher income associated with higher incidence.
(31) Pearl Ecological 2000–2002 No association with income.
Listeria (33) Gillespie Ecological 2001–2007 Higher deprivation associated with higher incidence. Low SES associated with increased listeriosis incidence.
Salmonella (36) Borgnolo Case-control 1989–1994 Unemployed or blue collar father associated with increased incidence among children. High SES associated with increased incidence of salmonellosis in four of six studies.
(35) Banatvala Case-control 1993 Higher SES associated with higher incidence, but not for all species.
(29) Chang Ecological 1993–2002 Low unemployment and high education associated with increased incidence.
(26) Simonsen Cohort 1993–2004 Greater income and education associated with increased incidence among adults, but not for all species.
(34) Yonus Case-control 1997–2006 Greater income and education associated with increased incidence.
(37) Yonus Ecological 2006–2007 No association with individual income, local mean income, or parental education.
1

2007–2009 for SES data.