The head of Purdue University's Department of Animal Sciences was on a team of experts that examined the relationship between the health of agricultural animals and consumers' increasing demand for safe food. The report will be released Monday (May 7) in Washington, DC. Alan Mathew co-wrote "Healthy Animals Make Confident Consumers" with five other members of a task force organized by the nonprofit Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST).

May 4, 2012

2 Min Read
Links between Animal Health and Food Safety Explored

 

The head of Purdue University's Department of Animal Sciences was on a team of experts that examined the relationship between the health of agricultural animals and consumers' increasing demand for safe food. The report will be released Monday (May 7) in Washington, DC.

 

Alan Mathew co-wrote "Healthy Animals Make Confident Consumers" with five other members of a task force organized by the nonprofit Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST).

 

“This was our attempt to review the literature regarding animal health and food safety and determine what research needs to be conducted to determine the connection between the care and health of food animals and food safety,” Mathew says.

 

Task force chair Scott Hurd, DVM, associate professor of veterinary medicine at Iowa State University and former deputy undersecretary for food safety for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, will detail the report in presentations at the Russell Senate Office Building, Longworth House Office Building and the headquarters of the International Food Information Council Foundation.

 

The report cites challenges agriculture faces in meeting some consumer demands while maintaining animal health and food safety. Mathew notes that among the report topics is consideration of outdoor vs. indoor livestock production and the potential effects on animal health and food safety.

 

Mathew says some studies, for example, have shown differences in the levels of the bacteria campylobacter and salmonella, which cause foodborne illnesses in people, between outdoor and indoor production.

 

At the same time, the report notes, consumers want “virtually risk-free food” and expect farmers and processors to provide it. The authors offer several recommendations for research in animal health and food safety.

 

Other report co-authors are Barbara Masters, a veterinarian and senior policy adviser with Olsson Frank Weeda law firm in Washington, DC.; Steve Oliver, a professor of animal science at the University of Tennessee; Rod Preston, animal science professor emeritus at Texas Tech University; and Randall S. Singer, associate professor of epidemiology at the University of Minnesota.

 

The peer-reviewed report will be available online beginning Monday (May 7) on the Council for Agricultural Science and Technology Web site at http://www.cast-science.org, where the complete text may be accessed for free.

 

CAST is an international consortium of scientific and professional societies, companies, and nonprofit organizations. It assembles, interprets and communicates credible science-based information to legislators, regulators, policymakers, the media, the private sector and the public.

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