Category Archives: Research

Research – Campylobacter Cross Contamination in Abattoirs

NCBI MedPub 

Consumption of raw or undercooked poultry products contaminated with Campylobacter has been identified as a risk factor for human campylobacteriosis. We determined whether slaughtering of Campylobacter-positive flocks was associated with contamination of chicken products derived from Campylobacter-negative flocks slaughtered at the same abattoir. The presence of Campylobacter was investigated in 22 broiler farms 1 week prior to slaughter and in one abattoir on nine separate slaughter days. A total of 600 bulk packed chicken products were tested, with 198 (33.0%) of the products found to be Campylobacter positive. Of the 350 chicken products originating from Campylobacter-positive flocks, 180 (51.1%) were contaminated with the bacteria. In contrast, only 18 (7.2%) of 250 chicken products derived from Campylobacter-negative flocks were contaminated. In 14 of these 18 products, the Campylobacter isolates were identical to isolates obtained from the flock slaughtered immediately prior to the Campylobacter-negative flock. Notably, on 4/6 slaughter days, Campylobacter-negative flocks were slaughtered prior to the positive flocks, and Campylobacter was absent from all chicken products originating from the negative flocks. These results suggest that implementation of logistic slaughter (where Campylobacter-negative flocks are slaughter first) significantly decreases the prevalence of Campylobacter-positive chicken products.

Sprout Safety Alliance – Launches Website

SSA

Four months into its $100,000 yearlong federal grant, the Sprout Safety Alliance has a website and is recruiting people to help develop best practices materials for sprout growers.

Food and Drug Administration officials announced the alliance Feb. 28, saying it is similar to other public-private alliances for seafood, juice, produce and preventive controls set up by the agency. It created the Produce Safety Alliance in 2010 and the Food Safety Preventive Controls Alliance in 2011.

Water Temperature for Hand Washing Not Significant New Research

Science Direct

This study simulated factors that influence the levels of bacteria on foodservice workers’ hands. Relevant data were collected from the scientific literature and from laboratory experiments. Literature information collected included: initial bacterial counts on hands and water faucet spigots, bacterial population changes during hand washing as effected by soap type, sanitizing agent, drying method, and the presence of rings. Experimental data were also collected using Enterobacter aerogenes as a surrogate for transient bacteria. Both literature and experimental data were translated into appropriate discrete or probability distribution functions. The appropriate statistical distribution for each phase of the hand washing process was determined. These distributions were: initial count on hands, beta (2.82, 2.32, 7.5); washing reduction using regular soap, beta (3.01, 1.91, −3.00, 0.60); washing reduction using antimicrobial soap, beta (4.19, 2.99, −4.50, 1.50); washing reduction using chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG), triangular (−4.75, −1.00, 0); reductions from hot air drying, beta (3.52, 1.92, −0.20, 1.00); reduction from paper towel drying, triangular (−2.25, −0.75, 0); reduction due to alcohol sanitizer, gamma (−1.23, 4.42)−5.8; reduction due to alcohol-free sanitizer, gamma (2.22, 5.38)−5.00; and the effect of rings, beta (8.55, 23.35, 0.10, 0.45). Experimental data were fit to normal distributions (expressed as log percentage transfer rate): hand-to-spigot transfer, normal (−0.80, 1.09); spigot to hand, normal (0.36, 0.90). Soap with an antimicrobial agent (in particular, CHG) was observed to be more effective than regular soap. Hot air drying had the capacity to increase the amount of bacterial contamination on hands, while paper towel drying caused a slight decrease in contamination. There was little difference in the efficacy of alcohol and alcohol-free sanitizers. Ring wearing caused a slight decrease in the efficacy of hand washing. The experimental data validated the simulated combined effect of certain hand washing procedures based on distributions derived from reported studies. The conventional hand washing system caused a small increase in contamination on hands vs. the touch-free system. Sensitivity analysis revealed that the primary factors influencing final bacteria counts on the hand were sanitizer, soap, and drying method. This research represents an initial framework from which sound policy can be promulgated to control bacterial transmission via hand contacts.

EFSA – Call fo Tender Ecoli/Entero as Process Hygiene Criteria

EFSA

Call for tender: Usefulness of Escherichia coli and Enterobacteriaceae as process hygiene criteria in poultry (CFT/EFSA/BIOHAZ/2012/03)

Invitation

 

Research – British Food Journal – Deliberate Food Safety Violations in the Food Chain

Emerald

Abstract :

Purpose – Business malpractice in supply chains raises food safety risks for downstream buyers including consumers. This paper analyses the multiplicity of behavioural factors influencing producers’ motivation to intentionally violate food safety norms.

Design/methodology/approach – We review existing disciplinary approaches for the analysis of behavioural risks. Based on this review, an analytical framework is developed which provides a base for an interdisciplinary institutional analysis of behavioural risks in food chains.

Findings – The reviewed approaches on behavioural risk share the view that deviance is the result of multi-goal and (potentially) opportunistic decision-making of bounded rational individuals. The analytical framework presented in this paper integrates these approaches.

Research limitations/implications – The analytical framework provides a rough categorization of behavioural drivers. It neither details the context-dependent subcomponents which determine the utility outcome within each category nor the methods that should be used to analyse them.

Originality/value – A behavioural economic analysis based on the framework means opening up the black box of the regulatees’ action situation by incorporating the subjectively perceived material incentives in addition to immaterial motivations such as reputation effects, social norms and community pressure into the analysis. Based on an understanding of producers’ motivation, proper institutional solutions can be implemented to enhance producers’ compliance with food safety norms.

Free webcast with 3M and Professor Stephen Forsythe on the rapid detection of foodborne pathogens

3M’s Food Safety business has launched a fast, accurate and easy-to-use pathogen detection system.

The new 3M™ Molecular Detection System, based on an innovative combination of two technologies – isothermal DNA amplification and ATP bioluminescence detection – delivers highly sensitive results in real-time with positive results in as early as 15 minutes and negative results in 75 minutes.

With ready-made reagents and only one test protocol for all target pathogens, the system is easy to use, allows for multiple pathogen detection during each run and reduces the chance for human error or contamination. Individual assays for Salmonella, E. coli O157 (including H7) and Listeria spp are currently available.

For more details join a free webcast on Wednesday 27 June 2012 (3pm) presented by 3M and Professor Stephen Forsythe of Nottingham Trent University, follow this link to register.

2nd Link
http://view6.workcast.net/register?pak=4909146311582106&referrer=KW

Research – Shigella Genetics Tracked

Shigella Blog

Scientists have found new genetic information that shows how harmful bacteria cause the acute diarrheal disease shigellosis, which kills more than a million people worldwide each year.

The research, which could lead to the development of future treatments, was published today in the journal PLoS ONE. The study was led by Ohio University scientist Erin Murphy and doctoral student William Broach, with contributions from University of Nevada, Las Vegas and University of Texas at Austin researchers.

FSA – Research Financial Pressure- Increased Food Safety Risks

FSA

New research published today by the Food Standards Agency shows that some people are taking more risks with food safety as they try to save money and make their meals go further.

The research showed that most of those questioned (97%) believed the cost of their typical shopping basket has gone up significantly in the last three years, with half of these (47%) trying to make better use of leftover food. However, some people are ignoring ‘use by’ dates more than they used to, while others are keeping leftovers for longer than the recommended limit of two days in the fridge.

Research – Food Contaminants International Trade Causing Fast Spread

Science Daily

University of Notre Dame network physicists Mária Ercsey-Ravasz and Zoltán Toroczkai of the Interdisciplinary Center for Network Science and Applications, in collaboration with food science experts, have recently published a rigorous analysis of the international food-trade network that shows the network’s vulnerability to the fast spread of contaminants as well as the correlation between known food poisoning outbreaks and the centrality of countries on the network.

As the world’s population climbs past 7 billion, the sustainable production and distribution of food is balanced against the need to ensure its chemical and microbiological safety. The new paper maps the international agro-food trade network (IFTN) — a highly complex and heterogeneous system formed around a core group of seven countries, each trading with more than 77 percent of the world’s nations. Since any two countries in the IFTN have only two degrees of separation on the network, the IFTN is capable of spreading a foodborne contaminant very efficiently. It also tends to mask the contaminant’s origins once the system is compromised, since so many network paths run through the central nodes.

Research – Vibrio and HPP and Mild Heat Processing

Science Direct

Several recent outbreaks associated with oysters have heightened safety concerns of raw shellfish consumptions, with the majority being attributed to Vibrio spp. The objective of this study was to determine the effect of high-hydrostatic pressure (HHP) followed by mild heating on the inactivation of V. parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus in live oysters. Inoculated oysters were randomly subjected to: a) pressurization at 200 to 300 MPa for 2 min at 21°C, b) mild heat treatment at 40, 45 or 50°C for up to 20 min and c) pressure treatment of 200 to 300 MPa for 2 min at 21°C followed by heat treatment at 40 to 50°C. Counts of V. parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus were then determined using the most probable number (MPN) method. Pressurization at 200 to 300 MPa for 2 min resulted in various degrees of inactivation, from 1.2 to > 7 log MPN/g reductions. Heat treatment at 40 and 45°C for 20 min only reduced V. parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus by 0.7 to 2.5 log MPN/g while at 50°C for 15 min achieved > 7 log MPN/g reduction. HHP and mild heat had synergistic effects. Combinations such as HHP at 250 MPa for 2 min followed by heat treatment at 45°C for 15 min and HHP at 200 MPa for 2 min followed by heat treatment at 50°C for 5 min reduced both V. parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus to non-detectable levels by the MPN method (< 3 MPN/g). HHP at ≥ 275 MPa for 2 min followed by heat treatment at 45°C for 20 min and HHP at ≥ 200 MPa for 2 min followed by heat treatment at 50°C for 15 min completely eliminated both pathogens in oysters (negative enrichment results). This study demonstrated the efficiency of HHP followed by mild heat treatments on inactivation of V. parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus and could help the industry to establish parameters for processing oysters.