Title: Processed Product Safety
1Processed ProductSafety
- Lynn Knipe
- Animal Sciences 555.02
- Ohio State University
2Types of Potential Hazards
- Biological - L. monocytogenes, Salmonella, E.
coli 0157H7, Staphylococcus, Clostridium
perfringens, Campylobacter - Chemical - cleaners, restricted ingredients,
allergens, antibiotics - Physical - glass, metal, bone
3Biological Hazards
- Food must support pathogen growth.
- Need optimal pathogen growth temperatures.
- Need sufficient time for pathogens grow or
produce toxins.
4Pathogens vs. Spoilage Organisms
- Spoilage organisms cause color, aroma and
flavor changes. - Pathogens cause illness and sometimes death.
- Pathogens not competitive.
5Spoilage
- Quality changes due to m.o. growth and
byproducts of growth - Oxidation of color/fat, flavor changes.
- Total plate counts do not always indicate shelf
life or safety.
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7Food Intoxication
- Toxin ingested in food.
- Short incubation period
- no fever
- Staph. poisoning botulism
8Food Infection
- Bacteria ingested in food.
- Toxin produced in stomach.
- Longer incubation/fever
- Salmonella, E. coli, Campylobacter
9Types of Microorganisms
- Pathogens
- Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella, E. coli
0157H7, Staph, Campylobacter, C. perfringens, - Spoilage organisms
- Pseudomonas, Lactobacillus
- Useful cultures
- Pediococcus, Micrococcus
10What organism(s) should the meat industry be most
concerned about?
- E. coli O157H7?
- Salmonella - 24 hr. Flu?
- Campylobacter?
111997 FBI Data
- Listeria - 15 ds
- Salmonella - 12 ds
- E.coli 0157H7 - 4 ds
- Campylobacter - 1 d
- Shigella - 1 death
- CDC - 9,000 deaths - 94
12In the US, in 2004
- 42,197 reported cases of Salmonellosis
(14.5/100,000 people) ranking 4th - (12 deaths
(97) - 2,544 reported cases of E. coli O157H7
(0.9/100,000 people) ranking 20th (4 deaths -
97) - 753 reported cases of Listeriosis (0.3/100,000
people) ranking 28th - (15 deaths (97)
13Prevalence of E. coli O157H7 in Ground Beef
Percent Positives
Continuous Improvement
Results of raw ground beef products analyzed
for E. coli O157H7 in federal plants.
14Prevalence of Listeria monocytogenes in RTE Meat
and Poultry Products
Percent Positives
Continuous Improvement
FSIS results of ready-to-eat products
analyzed for Listeria monocytogenes Risk
Based Sampling Program began in 2004. Blue bar
represents randomly selected samples, comparable
to previous years. The combined pink plus blue
bar represents samples targeted to higher risk
categories.
15Prevalence of Salmonella in Ground Beef
Continuous Improvement
FSIS results of ground beef analyzed for
Salmonella
16Prevalence of Salmonella in Market Hogs
FSIS results of market hogs analyzed for
Salmonella
17Prevalence of Salmonella in Broilers
FSIS results of broilers analyzed for Salmonella
18Incidence of Foodborne Illness 1996-2005 E. coli
O157
Incidence per 100,000 Population
National Health Objective 1.0
Preliminary FoodNet Data on the Incidence of
Foodborne Illnesses --- Selected Sites, United
States, 2005
19Incidence of Foodborne Illness 1996-2005
Listeria
National Health Objective .25
Incidence per 100,000 Population
Preliminary FoodNet Data on the Incidence of
Foodborne Illnesses --- Selected Sites, United
States, 2005
20Incidence of Foodborne Illness 1996-2005
Campylobacter
National Health Objective 12.3
Incidence per 100,000 Population
Preliminary FoodNet Data on the Incidence of
Foodborne Illnesses --- Selected Sites, United
States, 2005
21Incidence of Foodborne Illness 1996-2005
Salmonella
National Health Objective 6.8
Incidence per 100,000 Population
Preliminary FoodNet Data on the Incidence of
Foodborne Illnesses --- Selected Sites, United
States, 2005
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23Food-Borne Illness Cases in US, Traced Back to
- processing plants - 5
- home preparation - 20
- away-from-home prep - 75
24Why so much concern in US about food safety?
- less agricultural society
- less time for interest in cooking
- expect longer shelf-life convenience, but
fresh natural - not handled as mom did
25Why so much concern in US about food safety?
- We eat fewer meals at home.
- More quick service meals, prepared by younger
cooks - An emotional issue
- TV Sweepsweeks magazine headlines
- my child my grandmother
26New Fight Bac Campaign
- Clean hands and food contact surfaces
- Dont cross contaminate
- Cook to proper temperatures
- Chill promptly (lt2 hrs)
27Processed Meat Microbiology Lines of Defense
- minimize contamination
- raw materials finished
- processing interventions
- salt, nitrite, lactate, cooking
- suppress growth
- packaging, temp. control
28Where Contamination Can Happen?
- plant design construction
- equipment design
- raw materials
- maintenance
- employee hygiene
- cleaning sanitizing
29Processing Interventions
- Salt, nitrite, lactacte, phosphates
- floral shift Gram- to Gram
- lag phase after curing
- Fermenting drying
- pH and aw reduction
- competitive inhibition
30Processing Interventions
- Cooking
- 144 to 160ºF (140ºF for 12 min)
- 95 reduction
- more susceptible to contamination
- Certified pork if not gt137ºF (58C), frozen
storage (time requirements) or 3 salt
31Processing Interventions
- Cooling (stabilization)
- slow C. perfringen growth
- Freezing
- slows growth, doesnt always destroy organisms
- Irradiation
- beef, pork, poultry spices, not processed meat
products.
32Hurdle Effect or Barrier Concept
- Synergism using 2 or more intervention
methods. - Multiple hurdles decrease the chance of
resistant pathogen strains.
33Pathogens Specific to Product Types
- Fresh Beef E. coli O157H7
- Fresh Pork Salmonella
- Fresh Poultry Salmonella, Campylobacter
- Fully Cooked Products Listeria monocytogenes,
Clostridium perfringens
34Other Hazards
- Chemical - cleaners, restricted ingredients,
allergens, antibiotics - storage, inventory, training
- Physical - glass, metal, bone
- no glass in Meat Lab