By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Much of the safety of the U.S. meat supply depends
on veterinarians, a specialty area two Mississippi State
University students are soon to pursue. Junior
Jonathan Mitchell and freshman David Smith, both from
Jackson, are two of 12 students selected from 55 applicants
nationwide to participate in the Food Safety Inspection
Service's Veterinary Student Employment Program. This
16-week program immerses veterinary students in several
areas related to the safety of meat and poultry products and
is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the
Food Safety Inspection Service. "I've
been interested in the food safety aspect of veterinary
medicine," Mitchell said. "This program allows me to take
some time as a senior to see all the different aspects of
the job." Mitchell's
travel expenses will be paid and he will receive a salary as
he spends the time in a poultry or red meat processing
plant, in a Food Safety Inspection Service laboratory, at
the Technical Service Center in Omaha, Neb., and at the
agency headquarters in Washington, D.C. Hart
Bailey, assistant professor of food safety at MSU's College
of Veterinary Medicine, is coordinating the career education
program for the university. He said of the 14 veterinary
colleges that had students apply, only MSU and Texas A&M
had two students selected. "Traditionally,
veterinarians' role in the food industry has been in the
production side working with disease or in managing the
inspections during processing," Bailey said. "One of our
goals in the food safety program at CVM is to increase
veterinary students' awareness of the whole spectrum of food
safety as a professional career path. "As
legislation and market concerns related to food safety
continue to increase, new opportunities are being created
for interested veterinary students to pursue," he
said. Students
involved in the training program will be mentored by a Food
Safety Inspection Service veterinarian. They will spend time
working as in-plant veterinarians to ensure the safety of
meat and poultry products. They will also spend a great deal
of time with other agency veterinarians learning the variety
of roles they play in public health regulation. Bailey
said legislation passed in the early 1900s required
veterinarians to inspect meat and poultry. Originally, the
emphasis was on preventing diseased animals from being
processed for food, but the emphasis has shifted. In 1996,
Congress passed the Pathogen Reduction Act which focused
more on microbial safety issues. "The
new systems are designed to reduce microbial contamination
on raw food," Bailey said. "The Food Safety Inspection
Service wants veterinarians to work not just in meat
inspection in the plants, but to eventually be involved in
the production process back to the farm." The
career training program was designed to widen the horizons
of those students who participate. This is the first year of
the program. Each student who successfully completes the
training will be offered a job with the agency, which
currently employs 1,100 veterinarians nationwide. Released:
Jan. 7, 2002
Animal
Health
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Veterinary
students to study
food inspection
For more information, contact: Dr. Hart Bailey, (662)
325-7726
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:40
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm02/020107.html
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