
USDA
Announces Unified Food Safety Research AgendaAdditional Research Needs for Meat, Poultry and
Egg Products Outlined By Jim Core November 19, 2003 WASHINGTON, Nov. 19--Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman today
announced a unified food safety research agenda to improve the efficiency and
effectiveness of food safety programs. The research agenda is one of several
key initiatives USDA is implementing to
enhance food safety and improve food inspection systems. "Assuring the safety of our food supply is a priority for the Bush
Administration," said Veneman. "Through a unified research effort we
will continue to make progress to sustain and increase food safety." USDA also released a list of additional research needs specific to meat,
poultry and egg products that the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) will encourage
non-governmental entities to address. The government research agenda will
complement these efforts by industry and academia. Dr. Rodney Brown, deputy under secretary for Research, Education, and
Economics, and Dr. Garry L. McKee, administrator of the Food Safety and
Inspection Service, discussed the agenda during a tour of the Richard B.
Russell Research Center in Athens, Ga. USDA's Research, Education, and
Economics (REE) mission area worked
with USDA's Office of Food Safety, other government food safety agencies and
stakeholders to develop the unified research agenda. The unified agenda, which
prioritizes research needs and maximizes use of available resources, includes
research to: - Investigate the ecology, epidemiology, virulence and genetic
characteristics related to pathogenicity for E. coli O157:H7,
Salmonella, Listeria monocytogenes and other foodborne pathogens
to identify targeted control measures;
- Develop effective on-farm, feedlot, transportation, handling and other
pre-processing intervention strategies for reducing the incidence and levels of
antibiotic resistant microorganisms and key foodborne pathogens in meat,
poultry, eggs and fresh produce;
- Develop, validate and transfer technology of new and improved processing
methods to reduce or eliminate key foodborne pathogens in meat, poultry, fresh
produce, seafood and ready-to-eat foods; and
- Develop rapid and sensitive detection methods for abnormal prions to
prevent the possible spread of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies.
FSIS released a food safety vision document in July that outlines key steps
to improve food safety and protect public health. In addition to the research
agenda, the vision paper identifies strategies to improve workforce training,
streamline technology implementation, identify best management practices and
risk analysis coordination. FSIS is a public health regulatory agency that protects consumers by
ensuring that meat, poultry and egg products are safe, wholesome and accurately
labeled. FSIS does not conduct its own research. Rather, the agency identifies
research necessary to fulfill its public health mission. Within the REE mission
area, the Agricultural Research Service is USDA's chief in-house scientific
research agency and the Cooperative State
Research, Education and Extension Service is USDA's chief research funding
agency. The complete USDA unified food safety research agenda is available at: http://www.reeusda.gov/ree/pdf/foodsaf_research.pdf The research priorities specific to meat, poultry and egg products and the
vision document, in addition to other food safety information, are available
at: www.fsis.usda.gov U.S. Department of Agriculture | |