Editorial: The European Food Risk Assessment Fellowship Programme (EU-FORA)
Bronzwaer, S., Le Gourierec, N., & Koulouris, S. (2016). Editorial: The European Food Risk Assessment Fellowship Programme (EU-FORA). EFSA Journal, 14(11).
Scientific reports of the Fellows
Published in special issues of the EFSA Journal
2019
Ardelean A; Calistri P; Giovannini A; Garofolo G; Pasquale A D; Conte A; MorelliD D
Development of food safety risk assessment tools based on molecular typing and WGS of Campylobacter jejuni genome Journal Article
In: EFSA Journal, vol. 17, no. S2, pp. e170903, 2019.
Abstract | Links | Tags: Campylobacter, risk assessment, source attribution
@article{https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2019.e170903,
title = {Development of food safety risk assessment tools based on molecular typing and WGS of Campylobacter jejuni genome},
author = {AI Ardelean and P Calistri and A Giovannini and G Garofolo and A Di Pasquale and A Conte and D MorelliD},
url = {https://efsa.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.2903/j.efsa.2019.e170903},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2019.e170903},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-01-01},
journal = {EFSA Journal},
volume = {17},
number = {S2},
pages = {e170903},
abstract = {Abstract The ‘learning-by-doing’ EU-FORA fellowship programme in the development of risk assessment tools based on molecular typing and WGS of Campylobacter jejuni genome was structured into two main activities: the primary one focused on training on risk assessment methodology and the secondary one in starting and enhancing the cooperation between the hosting and home organisations, or other joint activities. The primary activities had three subsequent work packages (WPs): WP1 data organisation, WP2 cluster and association analyses, and WP3 development of risk assessment models. The secondary activities have branched into one workshop and the initiation of a cooperation programme between the hosting and home organisations. In the last quarter, the fellow had contributed to the characterisation of some pathogens in possible response to a changing climate, part of the CLEFSA project. The fellow attended various forms of training: online and on-site courses, and also participated at several conferences and meetings for improving his knowledge and skills, contributing to performing the Campylobacter risk assessment and source attribution.},
keywords = {Campylobacter, risk assessment, source attribution},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Abstract The ‘learning-by-doing’ EU-FORA fellowship programme in the development of risk assessment tools based on molecular typing and WGS of Campylobacter jejuni genome was structured into two main activities: the primary one focused on training on risk assessment methodology and the secondary one in starting and enhancing the cooperation between the hosting and home organisations, or other joint activities. The primary activities had three subsequent work packages (WPs): WP1 data organisation, WP2 cluster and association analyses, and WP3 development of risk assessment models. The secondary activities have branched into one workshop and the initiation of a cooperation programme between the hosting and home organisations. In the last quarter, the fellow had contributed to the characterisation of some pathogens in possible response to a changing climate, part of the CLEFSA project. The fellow attended various forms of training: online and on-site courses, and also participated at several conferences and meetings for improving his knowledge and skills, contributing to performing the Campylobacter risk assessment and source attribution.