A major
portion of the plan addresses Campylobacter,
Britain’s most common cause of food poisoning.
In the
plan, FSA is proposing to study how to modify processing equipment to limit
Campylobacter contamination, how the pathogen attaches to chicken surfaces, why
practices required for good hygiene are inconsistently applied and how to
improve adherence, what factors affect variations in Campylobacter disease rates, which antimicrobial treatments could
remove surface contamination, how frequently cross-contamination occurs in
household kitchens and what might be the best practices for safely cooking
chicken.
FSA also
plans to promote new food safety guidance regarding Listeria monocytogenes in hospitals, nursing homes and other
healthcare settings.
With the
emergence of Hepatitis E in pork and Hepatitis A in berries and processed
foods, these viruses are another concern. “Evidence points to these viruses
being more heat stable than bacteria and this has raised questions concerning
current processing or cooking conditions,” the plan states. So the agency plans
to review literature and do further experiments to analyze heat stability.
In early
2013, curry leaves used in a ready-to-eat dish in Northeast England led to an
outbreak of nearly 1,000 cases of Salmonella,
Shigella and Enteroaggregative E. coli. As a result, FSA plans to address the
need for better advice on curry leaf risk reduction.
The agency
will also be studying the proportion of foodborne pathogens acquired in the
home as opposed to external settings, the diversity of Enteroaggregative E. coli strains, exposure to metals and other
elements in the U.K. diet, potential alternatives for food preservatives, the
risks associated with buying food online, and bacteriophages – viruses that can
kill bacteria and reduce microbiological contamination of foods.
And, in
light of the horsemeat scandal earlier this year, FSA wants to develop tools
for detecting horsemeat in heavily processed foods and determining the origin
of foods.
Some
projects FSA has already undertaken include reviewing the available rapid
testing methods for detecting marine biotoxin in shellfish and researching
toxoplasma in food and livestock.
Other
aspects of the plan address food allergies and nutrition.
Source: http://www.food.gov.uk/news-updates/news/2013/aug/campylobacter#.UrwhO7SQNn8
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