Title: Biosecuritys Dirty Little Secrets
1BiosecuritysDirty Little Secrets!
- Julie Funk, DVM, MS, PhD
- Department of Veterinary Preventive Medicine
- The Ohio State University
2Biosecurity
- BIO
- LIFE
- SECURITY
- Precautions taken to protect
Life Protection!
3Total disease exclusion is difficult!
- Goals
- Keep out diseases you dont have!
- Minimize the impact of those you do!
4Production impairing diseases
- PRRS
- APP
- Influenza
- TGE
- PRV
- Mycoplasma
- Swine Dysentery
5Foreign Animal Disease!
- FMD
- Vesicular diseases
- Swine cholera
- African Swine fever
6Food Safety Concerns
- Trichinella spiralis
- Toxoplasma gondii
- Salmonella
72 Basic Concepts!
- Control movement of beasts
- Keep it clean
8Control movement of beasts
- Swine
- Rodents
- Wildlife
- Other animals
- People
9Main source of disease introduction?
?
10Rodents
- Bordetella bronchiseptica
- Salmonella
- Swine dysentery
- Leptospira
- Toxoplasma
- Trichinella
11Role of people?
?
12 Basic concept 2!
13PRRS Transmission
Otake et al., 2002 JSHAP
14Wash your hands!
- Row, row, row your boat
- 3times!!!!!!!!
- Use a nail brush
- In addition to PRRS
- Hand washing decreased Salmonella!
- Toilet facilities on site decreased Salmonella!
15Clothing
- Change boots and clothes!
- Between production groups
- Between sites
16But what about boot baths!
17First and foremost
- Boots must be clean BEFORE they can be
disinfected! - No disinfectant will work in the presence of
feces! - Water,brush, grate, drain!
http//www.biosecuritycenter.org/nbrctoc.htm
18BUT.
19Amass, et al., 2000. SHAP 8(4)169-173.
20So how to manage it?
- Maybe have 2 pairs per person
- One on
- One disinfecting
- Supply boots for visitors
- Plastic boots ok if short visit
- No strenuous activity!
21Summary
- Control movement of beasts
- Keep it clean
- Cant disinfect if it isnt clean!
22Practical Aspects for Food SafetyIn Pork
Production
- Julie Funk, DVM, MS, PhD
- Veterinary Preventive Medicine
- The Ohio State University
23The Business of Food Production
- You are the frontline !
- Guarantee
- Quality of Food
- Genetics
- Disease
- Nutrition
- Environment
24The Business of Food Production
- Guarantee
- Safety of Food
- Antimicrobial residues
- Physical hazards
- Pathogen hazards
25Safety of Pork
- NPB Pork Quality Assurance
- Pre-harvest HACCP program
- Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point
- Good Production Practices
- represent critical control points
- Directed primarily toward chemical and
antimicrobial residues, physical hazards
26Food Safety ConcernImpetus for emergence
- Large scale foodborne disease outbreaks
- USA, Sweden, Denmark
- Trade Concerns
- Demographic changes
- Older, immunocompromised, daycare, eldercare,
eating out, women in the work force, demise of
home economics, food industry consolidation
27Food borne disease in US
- 76 million illnesses
- 5000 deaths
- Known pathogens 14 million illnesses
- 1800 deaths
- 30 bacterial, 3 parasite, 67 viral
28Food borne disease in US
- Campylobacter, Salmonella, Yersinia
- More than 4 million illnesses alone
- Salmonella, Listeria, Toxoplasma
- 1500/1800 deaths
29Salmonella
- Over 2400 serotypes
- If it has a spine it is home to a salmonella!
- Some host adapted serotypes
- S. choleraesuis in swine
- Most swine (and other animals!) asymptomatic
- Survives well in environment
30Regulatory implications
- Regulatory action at slaughter and processing
- HACCP/Pathogen Reduction Rule
- Monitor E. coli 0157H7, Salmonella enterica and
generic E. coli - Increased interest in pre-harvest (on-farm)
control
31What is the impact on swine farms?
- Since E. coli O157H7 not in swine (?)
- Generic E. coli only a measure of gross
contamination - Salmonella!
32Pre-harvest Interventions
- Sweden and Denmark
- Both programs
- Quarantine Salmonella herds
- Special slaughter
- Depopulate in some cases
- Mandatory on farm interventions
- Marketing penalties
33Salmonella enterica in swineUnited States
- Davies, et al (1997)
- 24.6 pig prevalence
- 83 farm prevalence
- NAHMS (1995)
- 6 pig prevalence
- 38.2 farm prevalence
- USDA (1998)
- 6.5-8.7 of carcasses
34Pre-harvest Control of Salmonella
- Not clear cut
- Complex epidemiology
- Salmonella are everywhere!
- U.S. has benefit of no large scale outbreak
- Scientifically and economically sound approaches
35Pre-harvest Control of Salmonella
- Interventions that appear to have promise
- Feed
- Physical attributes vs. contamination
- Coarse grind
- Acidification--Whey--Wet feed
- Aerosol transmission
- lower infectious dose!
- rapid
36Interventions with promise
- Hygiene practices
- Personnel
- Environmental
- Biosecurity
- Vaccines?
- Sodium Chlorate?
- Environmental control
- Season
- Temperature variation
- Stocking density
- Marketing group or density?
37Salmonella control?
- Practical advice
- Good Production practices!
- Keep abreast!
- See if there is a marketing advantage for you!
- Place yourself in position to take advantage!
38Pre-harvest Food SafetyTrichinella spiralis
- Probably the reason for porks good record!
- 500 cases/year in 1950s to lt50 now
- most associated with wild game
- APHIS .013 positive swine
- Virtually absent in North Carolina
- Modern production practices
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40Trichinella spiralisPre-harvest control
- Well known risk factors for infection
- Control measures - benefit production
41Trichinella spiralisPre-harvest control
- HACCP approach proposed
- USDA APHIS
- Trichinae Certification Project
- Pilot Program
- http//www.aphis.usda.gov/vs/trichinae/
- http//porkscience.org/
42Trichinella spiralisPre-harvest control
- Avoids testing of all product ()
- EU tests all products (digestion tests)
- 572 million /yr
43Trichinella spiralisPre-harvest HACCP
- ID Hazard
- Trichinella spiralis infection of pork
- Where it can enter
- Incoming animals (need to have same controls)
- nutrition uncooked garbage, (table scraps!)
- biosecurity wildlife contact (skunks, raccoons)
- pest control rodents
- hygiene cannibalism (remove deads)
44Toxoplasma gondii
- Is probably the next pre-harvest target
- Well established risk factors
- Results in significant disease costs
- High case fatality rate
- Relatively high prevalence in swine
- 3-20
- Market pigsltsows
45Toxoplasma gondii
46Only need to add 1 more CCP
- Swine with cat exposure
- 9 X greater odds to be Toxoplasma positive!
- Cats must be controlled!
47Bottom Line
- Salmonella epidemiology complex
- Pre-harvest control challenging
- U.S. behind in the game
- Production of food vs. commodity
- Opportunity to define pre-harvest food safety
management-Salmonella - History of success!
48Bottom Line
- Trichinella and Toxoplasma
- Low prevalence (compared to Salmonella!)
- Known risk factors
- Production enhancing practices
- Certification readily attainable!
- Starting point!