Poultry farmers have a huge role to play in reducing the levels of food contaminated with campylobacter and salmonella, according to a new brief released by the respected US think-tank Pew Charitable Trusts.
Contaminated meat and poultry products are responsible for an estimated 2 million bacterial illnesses in the US each year. One study, conducted jointly by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Food and Drug Administration and Department of Agriculture indicated that 35% of campylobacter cases are linked to chicken and turkey and 36% of salmonella illnesses are associated with chicken, turkey, beef and pork.
The Pew Trusts say in the brief that a comprehensive approach to poultry and meat safety must start on the holding because harmful bacteria often originate there and then enter the slaughterhouse with food animals.
Quoting its influential 2017 report, “Food Safety from Farm to Fork: Interventions on Farms and Feedlots can improve US Meat and Poultry safety”, the brief says there are currently three types of on-farm intervention that can make a difference:
Interventions
The study highlights the effective work carried out in Sweden, Finland, Norway and Denmark in implementing successful food safety control programmes to reduce Salmonella contamination in poultry and swine, noting the strict on-farm biosecurity measures in force. These include cleaning and disinfecting animal housing, extensive testing and monitoring for Salmonella in the animals and feed, culling of infected breeding animals and separate handling of Salmonella-positive flocks at slaughter.
The results show that no Salmonella was detected in a sample of 4,033 Swedish poultry carcases in 2017; less than 1% of Norwegian and Finnish poultry flocks were contaminated with the pathogen in 2016 and up to 600,000 human infections from the bacterium were avoided in Denmark between 1994 and 2005.
In contrast, among USDA-regulated raw poultry products, Salmonella contaminates about 5% of whole chicken carcases, 15% of chicken parts such as legs, breasts and wings and 40% of ground chicken.
The study says probiotics can be administered to poultry to reduce the prevalence of Salmonella. Defined probiotics may consist of Lactobacillus species, heat-stable Bacillus species that can be given in heat-treated pelleted feed, or other micro-organisms.
A systematic review of commercial products found that defined direct-fed probiotics are effective at reducing Salmonella. As in cattle, the economic benefits of the use of probiotics in poultry may offset the costs, making probiotics a practical pre-harvest intervention in broilers.
Studies have demonstrated the efficacy of vaccinating broiler-breeders to reduce Salmonella prevention and concentration in their progeny. One study found that poultry companies in the US with vaccination programmes for breeders saw a significant reduction in the prevalence of Salmonella on birds entering the slaughterhouse, while another study has found that vaccinating breeders may be more economical than targeting the intervention at their offspring, because an average breeder will lay up to 180 broiler eggs a year..
Poultry vaccination can yield substantial public health benefits. The World Health Organisation found that reducing the prevalence of Salmonella contaminated chicken by half would reduce the risk of illness from eating a serving of chicken by as much as 50%. A significant decline in human Salmonella enteritidis in the UK and Europe has been linked to vaccination of egg-laying hens.
Some pre-harvest practices are used around the globe, but not in the US, such as sodium chlorate, which has been found to reduce Salmonella in chicken and E.coli in cattle and pigs.
Campylobacter has proved more challenging to control, says the report. Sweden has had success by using on-farm hygiene measures, including rodent and bird barriers as well as employee protocols to stop contamination entering on shoes and clothes.
Studies have established some relationship between Campylobacter infection and the bacterium’s presence in ponds, puddles and other water sources on farms, but more research is needed in this area.