Prioritization of chicken meat processing interventions on the basis of reducing the Salmonella residual relative risk

Rolando J. González, Fernando Sampedro, Joellen M. Feirtag, Marcos X. Sánchez-Plata, Craig W. Hedberg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Protecting public health by controlling Salmonella in chicken meat products continues to be a challenge to both industry and policymakers. Studies evaluating the combined use of commercially available antimicrobial interventions are scarce. The aim of this work was to develop a risk-based prioritization framework to rank chicken meat processing interventions that achieve the greatest Salmonella relative risk reduction. A baseline model characterizing the current U.S. broiler industry food safety intervention practices was created from direct observation of processes and expert elicitation. Results showed the combination of chlorine at the bird wash station and peroxyacetic acid at the on-line reprocessing and chill stages as the most common U.S. processing scenario. Irradiation at packaging and acidified sodium chlorite at evisceration were the most effective single processing interventions (98.8 and 91.6% risk reduction, respectively); however, no single intervention was able to comply with the current Food Safety and Inspection Service Salmonella postchill performance standards. The combination of peroxyacetic acid in at least one of the chicken processing stages with the current set of U.S. baseline interventions achieved .99% Salmonella relative risk reduction and ensured Food Safety and Inspection Service compliance. Adding more than one intervention to the U.S. current practice did not enhance (,2%) the overall Salmonella risk reduction. This study can help poultry processors to prioritize food safety interventions to maximize Salmonella reduction and public health protection.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1575-1582
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of food protection
Volume82
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors gratefully acknowledge Tyson Foods, Perdue Foods, Gold’n Plump, and Wayne Farms for providing access to information and facilitating observation of practices in support of this study. No financial assistance was received.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright Ó, International Association for Food Protection

Keywords

  • Chicken
  • Interventions
  • Public health
  • Risk
  • Salmonella

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