Poultry nutritional
health to combat food borne pathogens
According to
global nutritional health company Diamond V, reducing the pathogens in the
gastro-intestinal tracts of their chickens and turkeys can help reduce the risk
of pathogens in food processing and food products
Pathogenic bacteria
such as Salmonella, Campylobacter and Escherichia coli are among the major
pathogens causing foodborne illness worldwide. On the poultry farm,
conventional approaches like increased bio-security, better hygiene, changes to
management and husbandry and improved feed microbial security can help control
pathogens. Going forward, however, major improvements in pathogen risk
reduction require new tools — innovative nutritional health solutions — to
assure greater food safety.
According to research
published by Diamond V , effective pre-harvest food safety intervention against
foodborne pathogens in poultry and other food animals requires proven reduction
in prevalence, number, virulence and antibiotic resistance, which is a measure
of the ability to survive, reproduce and cause disease despite antibiotic
therapy that had controlled such infection in the past – reducing antibiotic
resistance therefore increases the likelihood that someone who is infected will
respond to therapy.
When poultry farmers
reduce pathogens such as Salmonella, Campylobacter and E. coli in their birds,
they are helping to reduce the pathogen load entering the processing facility.
Reduced pathogen load in processing can result in lower costs and improved
regulatory compliance for the food processor. Reduced pathogen load also helps
reduce the risk of product recall, which helps maintain brand integrity and
consumer confidence.
Nutritional health
research published by Diamond V focuses on immunity, digestive health,
performance, and pre-harvest food safety. The company will present its
pre-harvest food safety research and expertise to the EuroTier international
agricultural trade show in Hanover, Germany during 15-18 November. Dr Wael
Abdelrahman, poultry technical service & business development manager for
Diamond V in Europe and other experts from the company will be available at the
event to discuss nutritional health technology to promote poultry product
safety.
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