Tom Egan, vice president, Industry Services/Membership, for PMMI, adds his thoughts on how FSMA will impact meat processers and what equipment suppliers are doing to present more sanitary design options.
Metal detection and X-ray inspection systems continue evolving to keep meat and poultry products free of debris, but are still prone to false alarms and production delays.
A reliable rapid-detection system has been a desire of all sectors of the food industry for decades. As sound science has developed over the years, technology companies have found new solutions to meet the demands to test for various pathogens, while obtaining quicker results.
If a meat processor were to spend $16 million a year on vaccines for its cattle to prevent bacterial contamination, but a recall still takes place due to contamination further down the line, is the earlier pre-harvest investment worth it?
The beef industry has been focused on dealing with E. coli O157:H7 since the 1993 Jack in the Box outbreak. Researchers at the U.S. Meat Animal Research Center (USMARC) have been conducting studies since then to help the industry reduce the risk of this pathogen ending up in beef products.
Current antimicrobial compounds used by meat industry to destroy E. coli O157:H7 are effective against non-O157 STEC, according to an AMIF-funded study conducted by researchers at the Agricultural Research Service’s Meat Animal Research Center.