Abstract
The Dutch government and the meat industry, recognising VTEC as having important public health, meat quality and economic implications, have taken a number of initiatives within the last 5 years to control VTEC in livestock and meat. These initiatives, brought together last year in a 'Masterplan VTEC', include short-, middle- and long-term priorities. Short-term priorities include advice on interventions in the cases of an outbreak of VTEC associated with a cattle herd, the implementation of handbooks for Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) in slaughterhouses and deboning plants, and the execution of an action programme on zero-tolerance to faecal contamination of carcasses. Mid-term activities include surveillance of the occurrence of VTEC and other enteropathogens in livestock and meat, and the investigations of VTEC population dynamics in dairy farms, transportation and farm hygiene. In the longer term, this programme aims to produce a system of Integrated Quality Assurance, consolidating effective measures to control VTEC in Dutch livestock and meat, and integrating emerging means for control and prevention.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 79-83 |
Number of pages | 5 |
Journal | International Journal of Food Microbiology |
Volume | 66 |
Issue number | 1-2 |
Publication status | Published - 2001 |
Keywords
- Abattoirs
- Animal Husbandry
- Animals
- Cattle
- Cattle Diseases
- Disease Outbreaks
- Escherichia coli Infections
- Escherichia coli O157
- Feces
- Humans
- Meat
- Netherlands
- Quality Control