Monthly Archives: April 2023

RASFF Alert – Bacterial Contamination – Milk

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Milk with a sour taste due to bacterial growth from Denmark in Germany

RASFF Alert – STEC E.coli – Bovine Meat

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STEC (stx+;eae+) in bovine meat (raw material) from the Netherlands in Belgium

RASFF Alerts – Listeria monocytogenes – Brie Cheese – Raw Milk Cheese

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Detection of Listeria monocytogenes in Brie cheese from France in Japan

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Raw milk cheese contaminated with listeria from France in Germany

RASFF Alert- Bacillus cereus – Prepared Dish

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Bacillus cereus in prepared dish from Austria in Italy

RASFF Alerts – Animal Feed – Ergot Alkaloids – Triticale

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Ergot (Claviceps purpurea) in triticale from France in Belgium and Poland

RASFF Alerts – Mold/Mould – Corn – Hulled Sunflower Seeds – Feed Material

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Corn – mould from Ukraine in Poland

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Sunflower meal from hulled sunflower seeds – mold from Ukraine in Poland and Lithuania

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Mould in feed material from Ukraine in Poland

RASFF Alert – Animal Feed – Salmonella

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Salmonella spp. in rapeseed cakes from Germany in the Netherlands

Kenya – Salmonella and E. coli suspected in large, deadly outbreak in Kenya

Food Safety News

Four people have died and more than 600 were sickened at two schools in Kenya recently.

The Ministry of Health (MOH) is investigating a suspected gastroenteritis outbreak at Mukumu Girls and Butere Boys high schools in Kakamega County.

The illness appears to have started on March 1 and as of April 14, 627 patients are sick with 19 students admitted to seven health facilities across the country. Symptoms include fever, abdominal pain, cramps, vomiting, and diarrhea. One teacher and three students have died.

Both schools have been closed by the Ministry of Education and Kakamega County government while investigations are ongoing.

Research – CFA’s dataset central to preparing response to awaited changes in EU Listeria regulations – but more involvement needed from other sections of industry

CFA

Work continues on building a consortium of European and international industry and the industry Response to the EU’s awaited but undefined proposed changes to Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) legislation (EU Microbiological Criteria for Foodstuffs Regulation 2073/2005) (CFA News #56 and #57).

Potential changes to the regulation include:

  • loss of 100 cfu/g as an upper limit and introduction of zero tolerance/not detected in 25g
  • requirements to set shelf life by challenge testing and not durability testing.

This is the most important policy matter for the UK industry, which can demonstrate through hard data (epidemiology, food and environmental sampling) that its approach is much more effective from a public health perspective than that in other major European countries and across Europe, the UK listeriosis rate consistently being half that of Europe as a whole.

Read more at the link above.

Research – Presence of Foodborne Bacteria in Wild Boar and Wild Boar Meat—A Literature Survey for the Period 2012–2022

MDPI

Abstract

The wild boar is an abundant game species with high reproduction rates. The management of the wild boar population by hunting contributes to the meat supply and can help to avoid a spillover of transmissible animal diseases to domestic pigs, thus compromising food security. By the same token, wild boar can carry foodborne zoonotic pathogens, impacting food safety. We reviewed literature from 2012–2022 on biological hazards, which are considered in European Union legislation and in international standards on animal health. We identified 15 viral, 10 bacterial, and 5 parasitic agents and selected those nine bacteria that are zoonotic and can be transmitted to humans via food. The prevalence of CampylobacterListeria monocytogenesSalmonella, Shiga toxin-producing E. coli, and Yersinia enterocolitica on muscle surfaces or in muscle tissues of wild boar varied from 0 to ca. 70%. One experimental study reported the transmission and survival of Mycobacterium on wild boar meat. BrucellaCoxiella burnetiiListeria monocytogenes, and Mycobacteria have been isolated from the liver and spleen. For Brucella, studies stressed the occupational exposure risk, but no indication of meat-borne transmission was evident. Furthermore, the transmission of C. burnetii is most likely via vectors (i.e., ticks). In the absence of more detailed data for the European Union, it is advisable to focus on the efficacy of current game meat inspection and food safety management systems.