Although widely recognized as an important waterborne pathogen, Giardia
duodenalis can also be transmitted by contamination of food. The same
properties of this protozoan parasite that mean that water is an
excellent transmission vehicle are also important for foodborne
transmission. These include the low infective dose, the high number of
cysts that are excreted, and the robustness of these transmission
stages. However, many more outbreaks of waterborne giardiasis have been
reported than foodborne outbreaks. This is probably partly due to
epidemiological tracing being much more difficult for foodborne
outbreaks than waterborne outbreaks, and the number of persons exposed
to infection often being fewer. Nevertheless, the potential importance
of foodborne transmission is gradually being recognized, and a wide
range of different foodstuffs have been associated with those outbreaks
that have been recorded. Additionally, various factors mean that the
potential for foodborne transmission is becoming of increasing
importance: these include the growth of international food trade, a
current trend for eating raw or very lightly cooked foods, and the rise
in small-scale organic farms, where there the possibility for
contamination of vegetable crops with animal faeces may be greater.