We, from producer to consumer, are all concerned about salmonella and the
safety of pork. I have been reading an interesting paper by two researchers on
how errors of omission on pig farms can lead to Salmonella in pigmeat. They make
some interesting points, reinforcing some we are now well aware of - like better
biosecurity, transmission from vermin, cats, dogs, foxes, birds, flies, and of
course, higher herd health.
Thorough cleandown
Where
biosecurity is concerned, they re-emphasise the importance of a thorough
preparatory cleandown before disinfection with an approved farm detergent. I've
been saying this for ages and notice on my farm visits how commonly this is
ignored or done insufficiently well.
This needs to be a heavy-duty,
degreasing type. Moreover, the manager must allow the pig technician time to
achieve adequate coverage and soak-in time before going on to use a disinfectant
which is approved for a 100% kill of the most common food poisoning strain -
S. typhimurium.
Weak
Apparently some commonly-used
disinfectants are weak against this organism, something I didn't know.
One other thing we must improve is transmission from one section of the
farm to another and hand-washing when moving, say from the growing areas to the
farrowing and nurseries (and back again) may be advisable. The Japanese have
been doing this for some time, and they are really fussy about 'clean meat'.
Again our control of any vehicles delivering or collecting from the
'production area' of the farm must be reviewed and entry must be organised so
that any vehicle and its driver is kept outside the perimeter.
Impossible
Disinfected or not, as it is almost impossible
satisfactorily to sanitise a vehicle doing multi-deliveries. They re-emphasise
stocking density (a 30 year-old bee in my bonnet!) and showed that overcrowded
pigs result in more salmonellae, probably due to faecal contact and raised
stress.
Now here's a surprise - to me anyway. Feed is considered a
low-risk vector. Throughout my working life among pigs there have been three
canards - 'blame the government', 'blame the vet', and 'blame the food'!
Salmonella reducer
They claim that feed can actually be a
Salmonella reducer. Especially if it is ground towards the coarser end and
contains acidifiers, or is correctly fermented when fed liquid, and/ or involves
whey.
They think that acidifiers enhance the killing of Salmonellae in
the stomach, but it is not absolute; being preventive and not curative. They
advise that once started, in order to control Salmonellae in the meat they
should be continued to slaughter, even if the manufacturers say that they do the
most good early on in the pigs growing life.
This will please the firms
concerned who, I guess, stand to sell up to four times as much. Hmmn, we'll
see!
Pig health
(David Burch)
Pig Management
(John Gadd)
Nutrition
(Dr Ioannis Mavromichalis)
Anything in the pig world
(Vincent ter Beek)
IPVS 2012
(Dr Won Hyung Lee)








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