Abstract:
Salmonella and Campylobacter continue to be major foodborne pathogens and contaminated
raw chicken meat is considered to be an important source of these bacteria. To address this 
issue an experimental study was conducted from June to December 2023 to estimate the 
contamination burden of Salmonella and Campylobacter in chicken meat and the processing 
equipment slaughtered at household level and assessing the hygienic practice in Harar City. 
A total of 120 households were randomly selected from the total household census of Harar 
city regardless of their religious, income and ethnicity. The households were provided with 
live chicken, and they used to slaughter according to the regular practice they follow. A total 
of 480 samples were collected which include: chicken neck flap, cloaca and surface swabs 
from food processing equipment before and after slaughtering chicken at home. For the 
microbiological assessment, discarding four samples and the remaining were exposed to 
serial dilution to determine Salmonella and Campylobacter load. Out of the total 476 samples 
examined, 78(16.4 %) were positive for Campylobacter and 16(3.4%) positive for 
Salmonella. Campylobacter was recorded from 17(14.3%), 40(33.6%), 1(0.8%), and 20
(16.8%) of chicken neck flap, cloaca swab, food processing equipment surface before 
processing and food processing equipment surface after processing respectively whereas the 
record of Salmonella was detected in 9 (7.6%), 3(2.5%), 2(1.7%) and 2(1.7%) of the 
respective samples. A high isolation rate of Campylobacter was observed in cloaca (33.6%) 
and a high isolation rate of Salmonella was observed on neck flap (7.66%). The load of 
Campylobacter on different samples showed that in log10 cfu/ml 5.36, 6.62 and 3.53 was 
detected on neck flap, cloaca and FSA respectively. Whereas the respective load of
Salmonella on samples showed that; 2.68 and 3.74 was detected on neck flap and cloaca 
swab samples. Observational assessment of the chicken meat handling practices in household 
identified some wrong practices. The households’ practices of washing kitchen utensils and 
chicken meat were poor, and the isolation rate and load of Salmonella and Campylobacter
were high. Based on these results, recommendations related to public awareness on 
appropriate handling of raw chicken meat; like cleaning utensils properly before and after 
use to reduce cross-contamination were forwarded.