Affiliation:
1. USDA, Food Safety and Inspection Service, 14th Street and Independence Avenue, Southwest, Washington, DC 20250
2. USDA, Agricultural Research Service, 950 College Station Road, Athens, Georgia 30605
Abstract
ABSTRACT
To evaluate whether the number of
Escherichia coli
bacteria in carcass rinses from chicken slaughter establishments could be monitored for the purpose of microbial process control, we drew a random sample from 20 of 127 large USDA-inspected operations. In 2005, every 3 months, two sets of 10 carcass rinses, 100 ml each, were collected from establishments, netting 80 sample sets from the rehang and postchill stages.
E. coli
and
Campylobacter
numbers and
Salmonella
prevalence were measured. Mixed-effect models were used to estimate variance of mean log
10
E. coli
cell numbers of 10-carcass rinse sample sets. Relationships between
E. coli
and
Campylobacter
and
Salmonella
were examined. For 10-carcass rinse sets, at both the rehang and postchill stages the mean log
10
E. coli
CFU/ml fit the logistic distribution better than the normal distribution. The rehang overall mean log
10
E. coli
was 3.3 CFU/ml, with a within-sample set standard deviation of 0.6 CFU/ml. The overall postchill mean log
10
E. coli
was 0.8 CFU/ml, with 13 establishments having mean log
10
E. coli
CFU/ml values of less than 1.0 and 7 having mean values of 1.2 or more. At the midpoint separating these establishments, a mean log
10
E. coli
CFU/ml of 1.1, the within-sample set standard deviation was 0.5 CFU/ml, with smaller standard deviations as means increased. Postchill sample sets with mean log
10
E. coli
counts less than or equal to 1.1 CFU/ml had lower overall prevalence of
Salmonella
and mean log
10
Campylobacter
CFU/ml than sample sets with higher means. These findings regarding reductions in
E. coli
numbers provide insight relevant to microbial process control.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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