| Literature DB >> 23688797 |
Sava Buncic1, George-John Nychas2, Michael R F Lee3, Kostas Koutsoumanis4, Michel Hébraud5, Mickaël Desvaux5, Nikos Chorianopoulos2, Declan Bolton6, Bojan Blagojevic7, Dragan Antic7.
Abstract
Within a recent EU research project ("ProSafeBeef"), research on foodborne pathogens in the beef chain was conducted by using a longitudinally integrated (fork-to-farm) approach. There is not any "single intervention-single chain point" combination by which the pathogens would be reliably and entirely eliminated from the chain resulting in total prevention of pathogens in beef and products thereof at the consumption time. Rather, a range of control interventions have to be applied at multiple points of the chain, so to achieve an acceptable, ultimate risk reduction. Various novel interventions were developed and evaluated during the project, and are briefly summarized in this paper. They include on-farm measures, risk categorisation of cattle presented for slaughter, hygiene-based measures and antimicrobial treatments applied on hides and/or carcasses during cattle slaughter, those applied during beef processing-storage-distribution, use of Time Temperature Integrator-based indicators of safety, and effective sanitation of surfaces.Entities:
Keywords: Beef chain; Beef safety; Control; Foodborne pathogens
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23688797 DOI: 10.1016/j.meatsci.2013.04.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Meat Sci ISSN: 0309-1740 Impact factor: 5.209