About 2.5 million people die each year from intestinal infectious diseases, IIDs. IID or infectious diarrhea is a bigger problem in less developed countries, but even in developed countries, there is one episode of IID per capita per year (Infectious diseases, Tomažič J., Strle F.).
The incidence of intestinal infectious diseases (IID) in Slovenia, similarly to other countries, is estimated on the basis of received reports of intestinal infectious diseases. The incidence of intestinal infectious diseases or foodborne infections in 2019 decreased by 26% compared to 2018. Intestinal infectious diseases of unknown etiology, which represent the largest share of reports in Slovenia in all years, have not been recorded since 2018. In the first place are viral intestinal infections, which are still among the main causes of morbidity in childhood (Infectious diseases, Tomažič J, Strle F). Among the bacterial pathogens, campylobacteria predominate, preceded by Clostridium difficile, salmonella, and pathogenic E.coli.
The actual burden of IID and foodborne infections can only be estimated through research.
This indicator shows the number of reported (i.e. the incidence of) intestinal infectious diseases (IID) and foodborne diseases in Slovenia and some EU countries in the selected period.
Intestinal infectious diseases are diseases caused by various agents: viruses, bacteria, fungi and parasites. They are transmitted faecally-orally (from faeces to mouth); usually through ingested food, water or unclean hands. Pursuant to the International Classification of Diseases ICD-10, they are classified among diagnoses A00 through A09, B15 and B17.2.
Incidence means the number of all newly determined cases of a certain illness in a defined population within a calendar year and is therefore a basic indicator of a phenomenon's dynamics (growth, decline, stagnation). Although incidence can be expressed in absolute numbers, it is usually expressed as a rate, calculated in relation to a certain population.
A person suffering from an intestinal infectious disease or a foodborne disease has digestion problems due to an infected gastro-intestinal tract, which is manifested by nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, elevated body temperature and diarrhoea. Intestinal infectious diseases represent a particular hazard to the elderly, people with chronic diseases, infants, children and pregnant women.
National Institute of Public Health, 2010 - 2020 (2. 11. 2020)
2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | |
All notified gastrointestinal communicable diseases (GCD) | 997,5 | 1087,6 | 972,5 | 964,8 | 1008,9 | 1280,9 | 1563 | 1567,6 | 506,7 | 374,9 |
GCD , unknown pathogen | 696,1 | 760,6 | 709,4 | 678,0 | 711,3 | 933,4 | 993,6 | 1014,6 | 0 | 0 |
Salmonellosis | 17 | 19,5 | 19,5 | 14,2 | 32,4 | 18,6 | 13,9 | 12,7 | 12,3 | 20,4 |
Rotavirosis | 78 | 107,5 | 68,1 | 70,7 | 96,2 | 89,5 | 59,8 | 66,5 | 30,5 | 64,3 |
Campylobacteriosis | 48,9 | 48,0 | 45,4 | 48,4 | 54,3 | 60,5 | 76,1 | 66 | 59,9 | 60,8 |
Other GCD with known pathogen | 17,5 | 10,9 | 4,3 | 7,0 | 5,6 | 8,8 | 7,9 | 10 | 6,4 | 6,9 |
National Institute of Public Health, 2020 (2. 11. 2020)
No. of aplications | No of cases/100.000 residents | |
hepatitis E virus | 1 | 0,05 |
hepatitis A virus | 4 | 0,2 |
shigellas | 6 | 0,3 |
Y. enterocolitica | 9 | 0,4 |
listeriosis | 18 | 0,9 |
parasites | 24 | 1,1 |
other GCD with known pathogen | 30 | 1,4 |
adenoviruses | 126 | 6 |
E.coli | 134 | 6,4 |
Salmonella spp; typhus and paratyphus | 170 | 8,1 |
noroviruses | 359 | 17,2 |
Cl difficile | 473 | 22,6 |
campylobacters | 514 | 24,6 |
rotaviruses | 808 | 38,7 |
All reported GCD | 2708 | 129,6 |
ECDC, Surveillance Atlas of Infectious Diseases, 2019 (2. 11. 2020)
State | Unit | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
Portugal | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 3,10 | 3,64 | 4,48 | 2,93 | 4,20 |
Greece | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 4,30 | 6,82 | 6,24 | 5,96 | 6,00 |
Romania | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 6,70 | 7,48 | 5,87 | 7,22 | 7,12 |
Ireland | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 5,80 | 6,33 | 7,92 | 7,29 | 7,08 |
Cyprus | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 7,70 | 9,08 | 6,90 | 5,09 | 7,08 |
Bulgaria | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 14,90 | 10,04 | 11,21 | 8,31 | 8,49 |
UK | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 14,60 | 15,14 | 15,36 | 14,28 | 14,58 |
France | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 32,30 | 27,7 | 24,86 | 27,82 | 27,78 |
Estonia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 8,50 | 26,67 | 20,14 | 23,80 | 11,32 |
Slovenia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 19,40 | 15,07 | 13,31 | 13,26 | 17,40 |
Austria | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 18,00 | 16,28 | 19,00 | 17,43 | 21,06 |
Latvia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 19,10 | 23,06 | 11,54 | 21,14 | 22,81 |
Poland | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 21,70 | 25,6 | 23,50 | 23,87 | 22,05 |
Malta | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 29,30 | 36,37 | 23,25 | 24,39 | 26,54 |
Denmark | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 16,30 | 18,94 | 18,56 | 20,20 | 19,27 |
Luxembourg | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 18,80 | 18,74 | 19,98 | 22,43 | 21,34 |
Germany | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 16,80 | 15,65 | 17,03 | 16,06 | 16,26 |
Sweden | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 23,70 | 22,81 | 22,81 | 20,17 | 19,45 |
Finland | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 30,20 | 27,55 | 27,89 | 25,96 | 21,29 |
Lithuania | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 37,00 | 37,25 | 35,25 | 27,73 | 26,34 |
Hungary | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 49,70 | 48,03 | 40,03 | 42,55 | 45,56 |
Slovakia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 89,30 | 97,65 | 106,51 | 124,76 | 91,59 |
Czech Republic | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 117,70 | 110,01 | 108,45 | 102,74 | 122,15 |
Belgium | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 0,00 | 23,85 | 20,24 | 25,95 | 22,06 |
Italy | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 6,30 | 6,81 | 5,52 | 6,01 | 5,39 |
Spain | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 43,30 | 0 | 0,00 | 0,00 | 0,00 |
WHO, 2017 (25. 07. 2017)
State | Unit | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 |
Austria | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Belgium | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 13,94 | 12,39 | 11,74 | 15,93 | 14,85 |
Bulgaria | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Cyprus | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Czech Republic | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 437,61 | 324,92 | 330,37 | 391,91 | NP |
Denmark | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 103,42 | 98,05 | 98,1 | 101,18 | NP |
Estonia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 9,78 | 13,56 | 20,94 | 0 | NP |
Finland | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 21,29 | 26,03 | 14,1 | 17,91 | 25,98 |
France | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 15,30 | NP | 16,62 | 18,88 | NP |
Germany | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 138,32 | 116,65 | 127,59 | 133,61 | NP |
Greece | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Hungary | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 10,80 | 9,86 | 11,35 | 14,17 | NP |
Ireland | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 61,07 | 59,84 | 57,98 | 64,06 | NP |
Italy | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Latvia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Lithuania | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 40,55 | 34,67 | 31,48 | 38,13 | NP |
Luxembourg | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 210,67 | 211,13 | 155,51 | 183,71 | NP |
Malta | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 93,11 | 78,19 | 85,96 | 101,31 | 95,06 |
Netherlands | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 2,20 | NP | 10,27 | 9,81 | NP |
Poland | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Portugal | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
Romania | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 3,38 | 2,12 | 2,77 | 2,94 | NP |
Slovakia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 427,24 | 301,60 | 373,11 | 412,83 | NP |
Slovenia | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 4,63 | 15,51 | 2,72 | 10,91 | 3,34 |
Spain | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | 16,05 | 15,18 | NP | NP | NP |
Sweden | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | 18,41 | 27,33 | NP |
UK | No. of cases/100.000 inh. | NP | NP | NP | NP | NP |
The incidence of foodborne diseases in Slovenia is high and is an important public health issue.
Within a broader framework, guidelines have been set at the European level by the Global Foodborne Infections Network programme (GFN 2013) that includes Slovenia as a member state and that is committed to enhancing the capacity of countries to detect, respond and prevent foodborne and other enteric infections.
The goals of in-depth monitoring of the indicator ‘Incidence of foodborne diseases or intestinal infectious diseases’ are as follows: