By
Linda Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A grant exceeding $1 million will enable
researchers to study the extent food-safety pathogens exist
in the poultry production process to determine the best
point to concentrate treatment efforts. "We can
measure salmonella and campylobacter in feed, chicks,
adults, litter and the air - all over the continuum - but no
one knows how they relate to the final outcome," said Dr.
Robert Wills, associate professor with Mississippi State
University's College of Veterinary Medicine. "We want to
find the most efficient time to intervene in the production
process to reduce salmonella and campylobacter in the final
product." Wills
and Dr. Hart Bailey, assistant professor at the CVM, will
spearhead research funded for three-years by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. In addition to scientists and
personnel from MSU's College of Veterinary Medicine, the
multidisciplinary research team will include people from
MSU's Extension Service, the Agricultural Research Service
and two different poultry companies, Sanderson Farms and
Peco Farms, operating in nine processing plants. "We
will examine risk factors in management decisions, in the
environment and in the production process," Wills said.
"Management decisions include issues such as stocking
density, how many flocks are on the litter before it is
changed and how much time passes in between flocks.
Environmental issues include things like the type of
ventilation or the type of water dispensers." Along
the production chain, Wills said researchers plan to divide
the poultry production and processing continuum into four
segments: breeder-hatchery, grow-out, transportation from
the farm to the plant and processing. They will evaluate
bacterial levels at the hatchery, the last week before
leaving the production house, when the birds arrive at the
processing plant, prior to the chill tank and exiting the
chill tank. "If a
primary point of contamination can be identified,
researchers can focus on that area to reduce the risk of
salmonella," Wills said. "We can make a lot of common sense
assumptions, but until we test them, any decisions we make
can be wasteful and nonproductive." Bailey
said the need for this sort of research increased when the
Food Safety and Inspection Service implemented the Hazard
Analysis Critical Control Point, or HACCP, regulations in
1998. Campylobacter is not regulated yet and testing is
difficult, but it is typically more common on broiler
carcasses than salmonella. "Our
long range goals are to assist the meat and poultry industry
in meeting the requirements of current and future food
safety regulations and to improve the safety of meat and
poultry products," Bailey said. "A lot of Mississippians
depend on the poultry industry for their livelihood, and an
even larger percentage consumes poultry. Therefore, we have
a vested interest in producing the best product
possible." Poultry
is Mississippi's leading agricultural commodity. The
statewide farm value of broilers and eggs in 2001 was almost
$1.17 billion. Bailey
credits the poultry industry's willingness to improve their
methods as a catalyst for this type of food safety
research. "Salmonella
naturally occurs on chickens and other animals and probably
always will. We are working with the industry to reduce the
levels as low as possible, thus making it easier to produce
an even safer product. But we encourage consumers to
remember that using proper cooking and food handling
techniques are still the best ways to prevent food safety
problems," Bailey said. In
addition to Bailey and Wills, the research team members will
include Drs. Danny Magee and Sue Ann Hubbard from MSU's
College of Veterinary Medicine, Dr. Anna Hood from MSU's
Extension Service, Dr. Allen Byrd from the Agricultural
Research Service, and representatives from Sanderson Farms
based in Laurel and Peco Farms based in Gordo,
Ala. Released:
Oct. 14, 2002
Mississippi
Agricultural News
![]()
MSU lands $1M
grant for food safety research
Contact: Drs. Hart Bailey or Robert Wills, (662)
325-3432
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:43
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an02/021014_foodgrant.html
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